Slashdot Mirror


Pledge of Allegiance Ruled Unconstitutional

VUSE g-EE-k and entirely too many other people wrote in about an Appeals Court decision holding that the Pledge of Allegiance, as recited in its current form in various public schools (often by law), is unconstitutional. The court's decision (PDF) is available.

1,886 comments

  1. It'd be fairly easy to change by JDALaRose · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... remove that one pesky subordinate clause, and everything's cool.

    1. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by dejaffa · · Score: 3, Informative

      That subordinate clause was added by Congress in 1954, so removing it would be just going back to the original version. :-)

      --
      There is no 'i' in team, but there is in fiasco...
    2. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Mark+of+THE+CITY · · Score: 1

      Except that doing so requires an act of Congress, which (by design) is like pulling teeth.

      --
      The clearance system sounds logical. It is not. It is completely arbitrary. -- John Bolton
    3. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by tomhudson · · Score: 1
      Now if we can just do the same to the preamble of the Canadian constitution, which states that "Canada is founded upon principles that recognize the sovereignty of God and the rule of law ..."

    4. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Lars+T. · · Score: 2

      I don't know, if the Congress changes something, and the change is (found) unconstitutional, wouldn't the original be put back in place automagicaly?

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    5. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by dbrutus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That would occur only if this wasn't appealed. Since this has been adjudicated before and found to be perfectly constitutional, it's clearly going to be accepted by the supreme court and slam dunked down this appeals court's throat.

      The phrase 'under God' is no more unconstitutional than the prayers that start off the SC, Senate, and House of Representative daily sessions. I doubt that a majority of SC justices have been guilty of unconstitutional action by publicly paid for prayer for so long.

    6. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Golias · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Not really. The court did not find it unconstitutional to include the words "Under God" in the Pledge. They simply found it unconstitutional to ask students in a public school to recite an oath that mentions duty to God.

      Personally, I happen to believe the court is right on this one. A school is a government institution, and government ought not establish religion. Therefore, all religious expression, including study of religious texts (beyond examinations of comparative religions for history and sociology purposes) should be banned from the public school.

      It therefore follows that public (re: government-run) schools are not suitable institutions for education, because forces external to educators (and families of students) are restricting freedom of speech and expression. The time has come to do away with the public education system. The education of children, like the feeding of children, should be 100% the responsibility of the parents anyway. Parents who fail to provide an education for their children should be found guilty of neglect. Education funding for impoverished families should be handled via AFDC and charity, rather than through a department of education. Quality control of schools could be handled just like the universities are regulated today, only acredited schools could award valid diplomas.

      Under the alternative I'm suggesting, all parents would be able to decide for themselves whether to send their kids to a school that insists on the Pledge or not.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    7. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It therefore follows that public (re: government-run) schools are not suitable institutions for education, because forces external to educators (and families of students) are restricting freedom of speech and expression. The time has come to do away with the public education system. The education of children, like the feeding of children, should be 100% the responsibility of the parents anyway. Parents who fail to provide an education for their children should be found guilty of neglect. Education funding for impoverished families should be handled via AFDC and charity, rather than through a department of education. Quality control of schools could be handled just like the universities are regulated today, only acredited schools could award valid diplomas.

      I agree with your assessment 100%, but don't expect it to happen in this country any time soon.

      Of course, there are alternatives...

    8. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by KnightNavro · · Score: 1

      Prayer before a Senate or House session is not mandatory, therefore it doesn't violate the Constitution as mandatory school prayer does.

    9. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Vikki_R. · · Score: 1
      Exactly. (If only I had mod points...)

      Now, the next question is, what's to be done about it? I'm not exactly sure how receptive the congress-critters would be to an idea this radical.

      Any ideas?

    10. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by homer_ca · · Score: 2

      The prayer that opens a session of Congress is also not always Christian. Don't suppose you'd mind if I recited the Pledge with "under Allah", would you?

    11. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Prayer before a Senate or House session is not mandatory, therefore it doesn't violate the Constitution as mandatory school prayer does.

      First, we're not talking about mandatory school prayer.

      Second, saying the Pledge of Allegiance in school is OPTIONAL and has been for some time (since 1942, if I remember correctly).

      The point here is that these three judges apparently believe it should be unconstitutional to say the words "under God" because it means that those that object either have to participate or "protest" (by maintaining silence). In other words, some dufus has the balls to take this to court, but doesn't have the balls to just maintain silence? Or how about saying the Pledge and just not moving your mouth as everyone says "under God"--that way you aren't even really protesting and your conscience is clear.

      As CNN has already said, this is dead on arrival. It will be overturned by either the full 9th Circuit or the U.S. Supreme Court. As it should be. The word "God" does not automatically imply a government endorsement of any religion, and the 1st Ammendment does NOT guarantee that atheists will never hear the word God. Not even within the government. The 1st Ammendment simply means the country will never be officially "Catholic" or "Protestant," and it will never be illegal to be Muslim.

    12. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Martin+Blank · · Score: 2

      Actually, the Supreme Court hasn't addressed it in this aspect -- read the full decision. While the Supreme Court has addressed the statements on occasion in assorted essentially offhand comments, they have never specifically addressed this question. If they had, the Ninth Circuit would never have picked this case up.

      From footnote 12 on page 9130 (23rd page of 29 in the decision):

      We recognize that the Supreme Court has occasionally commented in dicta that the presence of "one nation under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance is constitutional. See Allegheny, 492 U.S. at 602-03; Lynch, 465 U.S. at 676; id. at 693 (O'Connor, J., concurring); Abington Sch. Dist. v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203, 303-04 (1963) (Brennan, J., concurring); id. at 306-08 (Goldberg, J., joined by Harlan, J., concurring); Engel, 370 U.S. at 435 n. 21. However, the Court has never been presented with the question directly, and has always clearly refrained from deciding it. Accordingly, it has never applied any of the three tests to the Act or to any school policy regarding the recitation of the Pledge. That task falls to us, although the final word, as always, remains with the Supreme Court.

      The three tests it mentions are also clearly covered in the decision, and the statute does fail them all significantly. Whether the full Ninth Court or even SCOTUS will see it that way may be a different story.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    13. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by DEBEDb · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is an element of coercion with children
      that is not the same for adult Congrescritters.

      --

      Considered harmful.
    14. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      But the appeals court said that an atheist or a holder of certain non-Judeo-Christian beliefs could see it as an attempt to "enforce a 'religious orthodoxy' of monotheism."

      Hail to the Gods! Suck my dick, Christians!

    15. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by BreakWindows · · Score: 2

      In other words, some dufus has the balls to take this to court, but doesn't have the balls to just maintain silence? Or how about saying the Pledge and just not moving your mouth as everyone says "under God"--that way you aren't even really protesting and your conscience is clear.

      I'm guessing you live in NYC or Los Angeles. Try being the kid who refused to praise god at Columbine High* in Littleton, CO. Or the kid who "hates Jesus Christ"* (because he chooses not to praise the same god) in a small school on the Bible belt. When a 300 pound offensive lineman whose dad is a preacher* is kicking the piss out of you for "worshipping the devel or some shit"*, you can hold your head up high with pride as he stomps on it...for you, are not a dufus.

      It's not so much that the word "god" is offensive, it is the implication of schools inadvertantly forcing children to at least pretend to believe.

      On a personal note, I'm glad to see it go. There was always something so creepy about "pledging allegience to a flag". Why would a flag get my allegience? Why do I need to cover my heart and stare at a piece of cloth and pledge my undying devotion to it? Too many people take things too literally and actually got caught up in that first line, to the point of ignoring the rest ("and to the republic for which it stands", but would seconds later claim we're strictly a democracy).

      * -according to reports at Columbine in that fateful year, the noted phrases above were true.

    16. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by EllisDees · · Score: 2

      The addition of "Under God" does transform the otherwise secular pledge of allegiance into a prayer. Why should it be allowed when other forms of prayer are clearly unconstitutional?

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    17. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by macdaddy357 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Judeo-Christian? There is no such thing. Christianity comes from almost purely pagan sources. Christmas and Easter are pagan. Christians don't observe any jewish days, not the sabbath, not even passover. If calling something Judeo-Christian is legit, why not Judeo-Christo-Islamic? Islam also claims jewish ancestry and the jewish God. Why doesn't anyone say Judeo-Christo-Islamic?

      --
      How ya like dat?
    18. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by KnightNavro · · Score: 1
      First, we're not talking about mandatory school prayer.

      Yes we are talking about school prayer. Read the case background. It was filed by an athiest objecting that his daughter had to repeat the Pledge as part of class.

      Second, saying the Pledge of Allegiance in school is OPTIONAL

      In a legal sense, you are correct, but not in a social sense. If you don't say the Pledge with the rest of your class, you were likely labeled a commie traitor in the 50's, or a raghead terrorist today. In any case, your peers would likely say you hate your country and ridicule you. A student should not be forced to pay lip service to a prayer that violates their religion.

      Numerous times the courts have ruled that a because something should be a certain way legally, it isn't necessarily that way socially. The doctrine of "separate but equal" is one such instance.

      In all likelyhood, this ruling will be slapped down, but I hope it is upheld. The two words "under God" turn the Pledge into a prayer. Just like any prayer organized by the school officials, it should not be allowed in its present form. We're not talking about freedom from religion, we're talking about not being forced to pray to something you don't believe in.

    19. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      I'm guessing you live in NYC or Los Angeles. Try being the kid who refused to praise god at Columbine High* in Littleton, CO

      It's fun watching idiots make fools of themselves like you just did: I GREW UP IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS OF LITTLETON COLORADO, just miles from Columbine. Believe me, if someone simply didn't say the Pledge no-one would care. If they try to draw attention to themselves ANYWHERE, they'll probably draw negative attention, be it in Littleton or New York City.

      Or the kid who "hates Jesus Christ"* (because he chooses not to praise the same god) in a small school on the Bible belt.

      Is there any reason to ANNOUNCE that you HATE him? If I hate Mohammad, that's my deal. If I make a point of going to Saudia Arabia and announcing that fact then it's probably in my best interest--out of my own self-interest and out of respect of those present--to just keep my beliefs to myselves. They are as entitled to their believes as I am to mine.

      It's not so much that the word "god" is offensive, it is the implication of schools inadvertantly forcing children to at least pretend to believe.

      Please tell me how schools force children to pretend to believe something if they don't have to 1) Say the "under God" part or, 2) don't even have to say the Pledge. How hard is it for those that have a problem with the Pledge just to stand respecfully while the rest recite it? You aren't standing in respect for the flag, you are standing out of respect for the others belief's. No-one would probably even notice--and that's perfect. Unless you WANT to be noticed? In which case you shouldn't complain about the reactions you are apparently looking for.

      You know what? I'm Protestant. I currently live in Mexico and my wife is Catholic. We go to Catholic church. Most of it is compatible with my beliefs but certain things that I don't believe I just stand respectfully while the rest of the congretation prays to the Virgin Mary--something I do not do. But that doesn't mean I have to sit down and draw attention to myself. That benefits absolutely no-one and, in fact, would be disrepectful on my part.

      There was always something so creepy about "pledging allegience to a flag". Why would a flag get my allegience?

      Read the rest of the sentence... "And to the republic for which it stands." You are pledging allegiance to the flag because it stands for the republic.

      That and the old tradition (perhaps you feel it is obsolete?) of carrying the flag into battle and if the flagbearer gets killed, someone else immediately picks up the flag and carries it on.

      Too many people take things too literally and actually got caught up in that first line, to the point of ignoring the rest ("and to the republic for which it stands",

      Uhm... That would seem to be YOU, otherwise your question would be silly.

    20. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      The addition of "Under God" does transform the otherwise secular pledge of allegiance into a prayer. Why should it be allowed when other forms of prayer are clearly unconstitutional?

      How is it a prayer? You are pledging allegiance to the flag and the republic for which it stands, not to God (exactly why the Jehova's Witnesses refuse to recite the Pledge). Prayers are directed to God--the Pledge is a declaration in front of those present.

      I fail to see where there is anything prayer-like about the Pledge.

    21. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Catbeller · · Score: 2

      It therefore follows that public (re: government-run) schools are not suitable institutions for education, because forces external to educators (and families of students) are restricting freedom of speech and expression.


      Um, "restricting" what speech and expression? You were going good there until I saw the slow inside pitch.

      The court merely points out that "under God" is a religious phrase, and violates the establishment clause. It should never have been inserted into the pledge in the first place.

      "Forces external to educators"? Like the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic rightist group, who lobbied to insert the phrase "under God" into a fairly sober and secular pledge in 1954?

      The time has come to do away with the public education system. The education of children, like the feeding of children, should be 100% the responsibility of the parents anyway.

      The right to a public education is provided by the Constitution of the United States, as I recall. A pesky document. That requirement, by the way, turned us into a glabal powerhouse, instead of an agrarian feudalism with an educated gentry with old money, and Everyone Else, the barely educated peons.

      Parents who fail to provide an education for their children should be found guilty of neglect.

      Shut down schools, disregard Constitution, create a pauper class. Imprison parents who can't afford kids, and take the kids away. Check!

      You are going to have a lot of orphanages and imprisoned parents if affording a 10K/kid/year is the measure of their care.

      Education funding for impoverished families should be handled via AFDC and charity, rather than through a department of education.

      The always chopped, derided, hated, tiny stipends given to poor families just to feed and clothe them, now funding schools? Oh man, I can imagine what the school for a kid with $50 a month to pay will be like. WORSE than the hostilely underfunded schools NOW?

      Quality control of schools could be handled just like the universities are regulated today, only acredited schools could award valid diplomas.

      Universities, especially private ones, are financially out of control and becoming impossible to attend if you are neither rich nor gifted. The inflation in expenses is endless, and the budgets are obscure and unshared with the students. A lot of the public universities have sold their souls to college sports. They are horrible examples of controlled educational costs.

      Under the alternative I'm suggesting, all parents would be able to decide for themselves whether to send their kids to a school that insists on the Pledge or not.

      Ummmmmmm. Let's see, you go to a very expensive religious school, or a very poor religious school, depending on who your parents are.

      I'd leave the country.

    22. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by zangdesign · · Score: 3, Interesting

      While this would be a great idea from a personal responsibility standpoint, ie., forcing people to take responsibility for their spawn, there's not a chance that this would go through.

      Our society requires that middle-class parents maintain jobs, both fathers and mothers, in order to survive. Our entire culture is now centered around this idea. The fallout of the radical change that you suggest would destabilize our society well into the next century.

      It would be simpler to shift to a university system for all grades above the sixth (or some other arbitrary level), wherein parents would enroll their children in a particular set of courses depending on the child's interest or (more likely) on parental desires (no escaping that). Furthermore, base all teaching certification not on an Education degree, but on a degree within the field being taught.

      This proposal settles several issues: 1) employment for recent graduates within a field, 2) special interests would be better represented, 3) children would not be subjected to courses that their parents did not feel necessary.

      Core courses could still be required for all levels of education, by concentrating state funding on those areas, since the State definitely has an interest in having an educated population. A combination of public/private funding could be used for all other areas - thereby allowing parents to put their money where their values are.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    23. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Mopana · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The education of children, like the feeding of children, should be 100% the responsibility of the parents anyway

      While I see some merit in this, I disagree completely.
      My sister became pregnant 5 months before she graduated from high school. After a short time living in the trailer owned by the deadbeat "father", and after months of near starvation, begging for money, frantic searching for decent paying jobs as well as a safe place to live, she's managed to survive. Now, about 6 years later, she lives right outside Columbus in a ghetto. Her neighbors were shot to death. She works for a house cleaning service, requiring a full 40 hours/week. On top of this she is studying to become a medical transcriptionist.
      Now you're telling me that it is her responsibility to teach her child 100% of what is taught in grade school? History, English, math, science, etc, etc, etc... people go to college for four years to become specialized enough to teach ONE subject for chrissake. How can you expect a single mother to feed, clothe, manage bills/rent, provide healthcare for, do the laundry, wash dishes, cook, clean, and a myriad of other miscellaneous things a parent must do, and on top of that, provide an intensive, well-rounded education that otherwise would have been taught by four or five teachers.

      Education funding for impoverished families should be handled via AFDC and charity

      How would this help, exactly? Would the AFDC grant money to the parent? Time would be freed up, but you still have the problem of educating the parent. Would they then educate the parent? How long would that take? Would they be going to school for years while continuing to raise their child? How would standards be enforced? Standardized testing? Let me tell you from experience how much of a waste standardized testing is.

      Do you honestly think, with the amount of support for public school funding by the government today, that the funding for this kind of project would be anywhere near enough? I doubt it. Not when so much emphasis is placed on building bigger weapons, fighting corrupt corporations, battling pharmaceutical companies, playing with social security, and protecting against terrorists. The fact of the matter is that the government, as well as a large percent of the population I'd imagine, does not place as much importance on education as there needs to be. This is the problem.

    24. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      If you don't say the Pledge with the rest of your class, you were likely labeled a commie traitor in the 50's, or a raghead terrorist today.

      If you stand up and recite the Pledge and just omit "Under God" no-one will even notice, let alone care. Is that too hard of a solution?

      That child has the right to omit "Under God" and everyone else has the right to say it. Problem solved, no lawyers necessary.

      In any case, your peers would likely say you hate your country and ridicule you. A student should not be forced to pay lip service to a prayer that violates their religion.

      See solution above. Just don't say "under God." If the rest of the Pledge works for you and the "under God" doesn't, I can't fathom that anyone would notice or care if a given child didn't say those two words.

      This is only a problem if someone purposely draws attention to him or herself. If you stand up, out of respect for your classmates, and simply don't say anything you will not draw excessive attention to yourself and no-one will make a big deal out of it. If you sit down or announce, "I will not say the Pledge," then, yes, probably many other children will ridicule you. But the first student is to blame because he drew unnecessary attention to himself.

      Everyone is entitled to unpopular beliefs. However, no-one is guaranteed that their beliefs will not be ridiculed.

      Have we come so far as to finally institute the "thought police" and try to eliminate any event that could cause anyone to some kind of opinion about somebody else?

      The two words "under God" turn the Pledge into a prayer.

      Buzz, wrong. The primary definition of prayer is "A reverent petition made to God, a god, or another object of worship." Nowhere in the Pledge are you making a petition to God, nor is the Pledge even directed AT God.

      So it definitely isn't a prayer. You'd have a point if we prefaced the Pledge with, "Dear God, I pledge allegiance..."

      We're not talking about freedom from religion, we're talking about not being forced to pray to something you don't believe in.

      As mentioned many times, no-one is forcing the student to say the Pledge. Or at least no-one SHOULD be forcing students to say the Pledge since 1942. If someone is being forced to receite the Pledge, that should stop.

      But the fact is if you are worried about students being ridiculed by other students for not saying the Pledge, well, 1) Children will be children. 2) You can't legislate thought. Especially of children.

    25. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by SacredNaCl · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'll be in a minority with this comment, and that's okay ...

      I've been a person of an "other" faith just about all of my life. I've taken offense every day to things like: the house and senate chaplin ...

      Now I'm not saying that our senators don't need some moral guidence (I know several that do!) -- but I strongly resent 110,000 a year for his salary, plus another couple hundred grand for his office.

      I similarly resent the chaplin for my state legislature.

      I also resent "In God We Trust" written on our money.

      ...and I have since the age of 5 always resented the words they added to the pledge of allegence in *1953* "Under God".

      Seperation of church & state is the one thing I have going here that they haven't completely taken away in the Bill of Rights. Every day my faith IS under attack from right wing extremist christians. The very freedom which allows minds to explore other ideas is under attack in Overland Missouri. Every year for the past 10 years there has been a bomb threat (from the same right wing wackos who pass ordinances like the one in Overland) when we get together for our new years festival ...and every year we have to have the FBI come out and sweep the place for bombs.

      So, Yes, I do mind. I do take offense. I don't want to live in "Pat Robertsons America" any more than I want to live under the Taliban. You want to worship? Fine. Do it in your home, our and about, do it in your church, your cicle, your temple, what have you ... But keep it out of our government and allow others the same "respect" you would ask when dealing with the government.

      Christians would take just as much offense to the words "In Goddess We Trust" being on the dollar. Or how about "In The Gods We Trust".. Or better yet ...One Nation Under Satan? How about One Nation Under Shiva? ...

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    26. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by onepoint · · Score: 2

      you made some very good points. I wont argue any of them becasue they make sense to me.

      but there is one aspect of this thread that everyone has seemed to overlook. The ridicule ( yes you pointed it out for the student that sits down ), but surely you must recall how anybody would look to find a fault to another person, specifically if that person was a geek. Any excuse was valid. ( i'm recalling the 80's so I might not be able to relate much to this )

      Bad enough ( for that student ) that someone wishes him/her to participate in the pledge, where in high school there is no opt-out policy, otherwise you'll suffer with the school pier presures. Now you find out you have the right, then you exersize it and you will suffer for it. I don't think that any group would welcome that person.

      Gee even I would have to think about that sort of association and I was pals with everybody, even the weird ones. tough call for whomever does actively participate against the pledge in high school.

      but I got to say one thing, If you got the balls to do that, and to mean it in your heart, then you can become anything you desire.

      Onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    27. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in actuality the early church choose to observe specific holy days on dates corresponding to pagan festivals to subvert the pagans. if you look into it, Easter is a rememberance of passover as the story of the cedar is made know as well as christs modification of the traditional observance and the introduction of the lord's prayer. and again, sunday is the sabbath in the christain faith and just as in judeism is to be 'remembered and kept holy' as commanded my moses. so unless you're trolling, you're just an ignorant jew.

    28. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Decimal · · Score: 2

      Perhaps the Supreme Court will turn this ruling around. But think about it, how much more likely would they be to agree that it is unconstitutional if it instead read "One Nation, Under Allah..."?

      Personally, I think the Pledge of Allegiance is sort of Nazi-like anyway. All those little children, lined up in a row and being taught mindless patriotism before many of them can fully understand what patriotism means.

      The phrase 'under God' is no more unconstitutional than the prayers that start off the SC, Senate, and House of Representative daily sessions.

      You never know -- this could one day be found unconstitutional as well.

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
    29. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Someone else: The phrase 'under God' is no more unconstitutional than the prayers that start off the SC, Senate, and House of Representative daily sessions.
      You: You never know -- this could one day be found unconstitutional as well.

      No, as the current case cites (see PDF link in story header), the case of prayers starting the Supreme Court, House, Senate, etc. has already been reviewed and approved by the S.C. based on it having such a long tradition and having become a fabric of society.

      I'm quite sure that this current case will be overturned for the same reason: It has become a part of our culture and our society. I learned it as a child, as have many others, and taking something away from it would be like removing a stripe from the flag.

      This would have been a completely valid case in 1954 or so when the change was made. I would have supported it at that time. But there apparently was no challenge made and the new wording has become a part of our culture.

      This decision will be overturned for the same reason that prayers are allowed at the opening of hte Supreme Court, House, etc.: It has become an accepted part of our culture.

      As CNN mentioned, the 9th Circuit is the most liberal circuit in the country and is also the circuit whose decisions are most commonly overturned. With decisions like this, I wonder why.

    30. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is OT, but I would have to disagree with what you said that "Christianity comes from almost purely pagan sources." *True* Christianity of course comes from the Bible, which does not teach that any holidays are to be celebrated except for the evening meal, which the apostles were instructed to "keep doing this in remembrance of me." That is why Jehovah's Witnesses do not celebrate those holidays, among others, since they have pagan origins. I would agree with you though, that *most* "Christian" religions do have many traditions and holidays that are of pagan origin.

      farmersckn

    31. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Cerrian · · Score: 2
      but there is one aspect of this thread that everyone has seemed to overlook. The ridicule ( yes you pointed it out for the student that sits down ), but surely you must recall how anybody would look to find a fault to another person, specifically if that person was a geek. Any excuse was valid. ( i'm recalling the 80's so I might not be able to relate much to this )

      Bad enough ( for that student ) that someone wishes him/her to participate in the pledge, where in high school there is no opt-out policy, otherwise you'll suffer with the school pier presures. Now you find out you have the right, then you exersize it and you will suffer for it. I don't think that any group would welcome that person.

      Potentially, the ridicule could blow up into something that's worse. How about discrimination for lack of patriotism? This may not be an issue in heavily populated areas, but in small towns and tightly knitted communities you can be damn sure not saying the pledge will get you some attention. How brave are you to refuse to say the pledge after Pearl Harbor, 9/11, or (insert next US tradegy here).

      And to counter the previous posts, silently omitting the 'Under God' is simpily conforming to the majority (not that it is bad), but it is silent conformity where no protest or defense of one's own rights is made. Conformity of this nature is the worst since a person essentially waives his/her rights without defending them.

    32. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by cyril3 · · Score: 1

      Oh, what religion are you then

    33. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by identity0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, did you even read KnightNavro said before you took the quotes out of context? Here's the originals, with emphasis:

      Or the kid who "hates Jesus Christ"* (because he chooses not to praise the same god) in a small school on the Bible belt


      Now, it's clear(to me, at least), that the kid simply chose not to praise God, and the "good christian children" around him decided that meant he hated Jesus, God, and everything else that was good and decent - in other words, ran to unwarrented conclusions. It seems he was doing just what you described yourself as doing in the Catholic church - "just stand respectfully". How would you like it if you were sitting in your Catholic church, someone noticed you weren't praying to the Virgin Mary, and everyone got on your case about "hating Jesus and the Virgin Mary"?

      As for the part about growing up in Littleton, I'm guessing that you weren't there for the fateful year when the name became synonymos with tragedy. By all accounts, the religeous ferver has increased tremendously since then, and I wouldn't be suprised if someone was singled out for not being Christian(and loudly proclaiming it).

    34. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not to mention teaching creationism in our schools. My sister in law is a high school science teacher and I was amazed to learn that she is compeled to give eqaul time to creationism while teaching evolution. The funny thing is, she teaches the christian form of how we came to be. I would think that this would be much more objectionable to people than the word "god" which is really just universal term for a higher being that most people believe in some form, not just the christian god.

    35. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First let me say i agree with most of what you say, but let me also say that this whole debate is just silly. Talk about a sick waste of tax dollars. I too resent the tax money spent on religious efforts. What makes it worse is the tax exempt status all religious organizations enjoy. As a taxpaying citizen, it seems to me that offering tax exempt status to any organization is asking me to endorse it somehow. Well I don't. I respect there right to exist, but also think they should pay there fair share.

    36. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Arker · · Score: 1

      That's funny. I don't begrudge them their tax free status, I just think it's unfair for everyone not to have it.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    37. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would have been a completely valid case in 1954 or so when the change was made. I would have supported it at that time. But there apparently was no challenge made and the new wording has become a part of our culture.

      If they didn't want to sit on the back of the bus, they should have spoken up then.

    38. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to play a little more civ 3.

    39. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by HelpfulPete · · Score: 1

      Friggin radicals! I mean, what next? Are we going to start enforcing the rest of the constitution? Not under the Bu$h junta!

      --
      "Society is like a stew. If you don't keep it stirred up, you get a lot of scum on top. " - Edward Abbey
    40. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by EllisDees · · Score: 2

      It is an appeal to a deity. What else do you need for a phrase to be a prayer?

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    41. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by macdaddy357 · · Score: 1

      Sunday was made the Christian Sabbath by the Roman
      Emporer, Constantine. He worshiped the sun, specifically a solar Idol called Mithra, who was the son of a greater deity, and born on December 25. A lot of the Dogma of the Catholic church, unchanged by protestants, came from Constantine, who created the Roman Catholic Church to spread the influence of the Roman Empire throughout the known world. Sunday is the first day of the week, not the seventh. That is why Jewish people go to Synagogues and Temples friday evening, or saturday morning, and why seventh-day adventists go to church on saturday. I doubt that they taught you this in sunday school, but it is the case.

      --
      How ya like dat?
    42. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by killthiskid · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I'm quite sure that this current case will be overturned for the same reason: It has become a part of our culture and our society. I learned it as a child, as have many others, and taking something away from it would be like removing a stripe from the flag.

      Kinda like how slaverly was part of the fabric of society in the South way back when? The argument that we should continue to do something today becuase it is what we did yesterday is totally lacking in thought, logic, or progress.


      This decision will be overturned for the same reason that prayers are allowed at the opening of hte Supreme Court, House, etc.: It has become an accepted part of our culture.

      I don't accept it as part of my culture and it is obvious, through the fact that this is in the courts at all, that someone else doesn't accept it as part of their culture. You are not everyone.

    43. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What exactly is your problem? There either is some reason for the bit about "God" or there isn't. If there isn't then why are you so upset about getting rid of it?

    44. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by iamwhatiseem · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Enough is enough. I am so tired of the "politically correct" bullshit that I could throw up. When will it be enough?? What do you want? Do you want a communistic style of society? Do you want to live where there is NO freedom of speech, just to be sure no one is upset? The fact is this nation is a nation under God. With 96% of the nation falling into that category, it is ludicrous to think otherwise. I for one am glad I live in America, with its religious overtures. I don't attend church, haven't for over a decade. But I am not in the least bit upset about any of this. There are FAR MORE THINGS TO BE WORRIED AND UPSET ABOUT then this. How about CEO's making 100's of millions of dollars, while we have a whole class of folks working everyday with no medical insurance, how about the fact so many corporations have moved plants that used to employ Americans, to other countries to avoid paying decent wages, insurance, and social security taxes?
      Indeed, you cry pales in comparison to real problems that exist.

    45. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, "Allah" litterally means "God" in Arabic. Just the same thing, different language. Only uneducated/stupid people would crawl up to the ceiling if they heard the "wrong" translation. Religions will always make me laugh...

    46. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by iamwhatiseem · · Score: 1

      While I agree tax money should not be spent on religous efforts, I completely disagree that they should lose tax exemption. When I make a donation to something, it would upset me to no end that 27% of that donation would go to the goverment.

    47. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      What exactly is your problem? There either is some reason for the bit about "God" or there isn't. If there isn't then why are you so upset about getting rid of it?

      Nearly 50 years of tradition, that's why. Which is exactly the reason the decision will be overturned. Prayers were permitted in Legislatures, etc. because they have become an accepted part of the fabric of our society (see the ruling for reference to that). Likewise, the Pledge of Allegiance, as it is currently worded, over 50 years has become part of the fabric of our culture. The courts are going to permit it on that basis.

      The complaint should have been made in 1955 or so. It wasn't and the wording was allowed to become part of our culture. Too late.

    48. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by operagost · · Score: 1

      Just mentioning a deity doesn't make it a prayer. A prayer is normally meant to praise or invoke. I could say something like, "Floods are an Act of God and not covered by this insurance policy," which includes the word "God" but is clearly not a prayer.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    49. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by arkanes · · Score: 2

      Just because it's an "accepted part of our culture" doesn't make it okay. Trivial, obvious example include slavery, racism, gender discrimination, and genocide. All of these were, at one time, accepted as part of our culture. Cultures change. That said, it probably will be overturned, but that doesn't mean that it's RIGHT. There was no good reason to add the under God part in the first place anyway.

    50. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      And to counter the previous posts, silently omitting the 'Under God' is simpily conforming to the majority (not that it is bad), but it is silent conformity where no protest or defense of one's own rights is made. Conformity of this nature is the worst since a person essentially waives his/her rights without defending them.

      This is where I don't understand you.

      You have the right to not say "Under God" if that runs counter to your beliefs. By simply omitting those words you are not conforming--you are modifying the Pledge to suit your belief system, and doing it in a way that respects others beliefs as well. No-one will even notice and everyone gets along just fine.

      Now, if you make a point of letting everyone know that you are not saying "Under God" then that's your decision--but no decision is without consequence. I'm not in favor of descrimination, but unpopular views are, well, unpopular. Courts can't change that.

      It seems that the conclusion here is that if school children don't say the Pledge of Allegiance, their unpopular beliefs will not be discoverable by others. That's unrealistic, sooner or later that belief will be discovered unless that child makes an effort to conceal that belief--in which case the child might as well just omit the words "Under God" for the same reason.

      As one Senator has put it, this is "Political correctness run amok."

    51. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by arkanes · · Score: 2

      I agree. Churches should be as tax-free as any other non-profit, with all the same restrictions.

    52. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by JeanPaulBob · · Score: 1

      ...

      ...

      I almost don't know where to start. Should I start with the way you don't seem to think doctrine has anything to do with religion? Or the assumption that the holy days of a religion are the only relevant details? Or the notion that the date of a holiday is its sole defining characteristic?

      As for your second question, well, those Muslims are just too weird.

    53. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go back to where ever you came from. This is a Christian country. Seperation of church and state does not exist in the Constitution. Rather it states to guarentee the freedom of religion. Try reading it! That is the problem with you liberals!

    54. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this an issue?!?! There are bigger fish to fry out there people! Why allow yourself to be offended by something as trivial as "under God" or "In God We Trust"! Be offended by a suprise left hook you receive while you're buying your morning coffee at Starbuck$! Be offended by turning on you television and seeing murder and corruption on the evening news! Be offended by having YOUR tax dollars spent on arguing a trivial issue, such as this one, in a court of law! Goddamn!

    55. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 0, Troll
      Kinda like how slaverly was part of the fabric of society in the South way back when? The argument that we should continue to do something today becuase it is what we did yesterday is totally lacking in thought, logic, or progress.

      I knew someone would bring this up, and that's fine.

      First, if you can't see the distinction between slavery and a minor mention to "Under God" in the Pledge inasmuch as its negative affect on society and individuals, you need to really take a good look at what you are saying.

      Second, as the descenting judge commented in the court ruling, the extremely miniscule possibility that "under God" could be construed as an establishment of religion is so minimal so as to not be a violation. His words were: "Lest I be misunderstood, I must emphasize that to decide this case it is not necessary to say, and I do not say, that there is such a thing as a de minimis constitutional violation. What I do say is that the de minimis tendency of the Pledge to establish a religion or to interfere with its free exercise is no constitutional violation at all."

      Third, as the judge also commented, such references are only viewed as an establishment of religion by those extremists that would insist that all mention of religion be deleted from all public discourse. "Normal," rational people, even if they don't believe in God, will not be significantly affected by the words "Under God." Only extremists, such as Newdow, are. As the judge wrote, "such phrases as "In God We Trust," or "under God" have no tendency to establish a religion in this country or to suppress anyone's exercise, or non-exercise, of religion, except in the fevered eye of persons who most fervently would like to drive all tincture of religion out of the public life of our polity."

      Fourth, we are not talking about slavery. We are talking about reference to God in a government-supported or tolerated setting. The Supreme Court has already permitted prayers in Legislatures, etc. based on them having become accepted and traditional parts of the fabric of our society. This decision will be overturned for the same reason. I.e., precedent exists, whether you like it or not, to overturn the current ruling.

      I don't accept it as part of my culture and it is obvious, through the fact that this is in the courts at all, that someone else doesn't accept it as part of their culture. You are not everyone.

      In a word, "tough." There are 270 million people in this country. It's impossible to please all of them all of the time. But to say that the current Pledge isn't part of American culture and tradition because a few percentage points of the population doesn't like it is to distort the definition of "culture" which, by definition, is a collective entity. The Pledge IS part of your culture even though you might not like that part of the culture.

    56. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      Do you want to live where there is NO freedom of speech, just to be sure no one is upset?

      There is no freedom of speech, if a child is being forced to recite a pledge that they don't believe in. Of course, the pledge is supposed to be optional, and that is what the Court should have been concerned with, not whether the "under God" part is unConstitutional.

      The fact is this nation is a nation under God. With 96% of the nation falling into that category, it is ludicrous to think otherwise.

      One of the purposes of government is to protect the rights of the minority from abuse by the majority. That is why the US was set up as a Republic rather than a Democracy. Let the 96% say "under God" if they feel the need, but let the 4% have the right not to say it, and a guarantee that the 96% won't be allowed to persecute them for it.

      There are FAR MORE THINGS TO BE WORRIED AND UPSET ABOUT then this.

      There, I have to agree with you. We have a similar debate in the southeastern US over Confederate flags. Look, it's just a harmless decoration (just two measly words in a pledge). What's the big deal? Take the energy you spend complaining about it and put it to some use helping people with real problems and the world will be a much better place.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    57. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by DeePCedure · · Score: 1

      First, we're not talking about mandatory school prayer.

      Last time I checked, invoking the divine during a verbal recitation was a defining element of prayer. Without a divine reference, you're just talking.

      Second, saying the Pledge of Allegiance in school is OPTIONAL and has been for some time (since 1942, if I remember correctly).

      The point here is that these three judges apparently believe it should be unconstitutional to say the words "under God" because it means that those that object either have to participate or "protest" (by maintaining silence).


      This is evidence of an incongrouos fallacy that permeates this society. So many Christians in America think that non-Christians are also non-patriots that it's almost taken for granted as fact.
      I am a patriot. I love my country. I served my country in the armed forces. I contribute to charities for veterans. I vote. I write my Congressional Representatives... often. However, I refuse to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.
      I very much want to participate, but I object to the inclusion of "under God". I don't believe in a deity of any sort and will not participate in a divine invocation that is insincere. Saying words that I do not believe about any divine or spiritual entity is disrespectful of the faith or faiths involved. I won't invoke the name of Jesus out of respect for Christians. I won't invoke the name of Allah out of respect for Muslims. The same applies to YHWH, Vishnu, Odin, or any other god. I want my beliefs respected, so why would I profane another's? My choice to do the American thing by tolerating and respecting your beliefs prevents me from reciting a patriotic oath. Your god has denied me part of my American legacy.

    58. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      Go back to where ever you came from. This is a Christian country.

      Suppose this person was a Native American who didn't want to acknowledge the white man's god. How would he go back where he came from?

      Seperation of church and state does not exist in the Constitution. Rather it states to guarentee the freedom of religion. Try reading it!

      Amendment I: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...."

      To my mind, making "under God" a required part of the Pledge would be prohibiting free exercise of religion, but so would omitting it. So, make it optional. Case closed, can everyone be happy now?

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    59. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Last time I checked, invoking the divine during a verbal recitation was a defining element of prayer. Without a divine reference, you're just talking.

      Check the definition again. I cited it elsewhere in this thread, but feel free to check dictionary.com yourself.

      That notwithstanding, the simple mention of God in the Pledge is not sufficient to be considered an "invocation." If the Pledge started with, "Dear God, I pledge allegiance..." I'd agree with you... THAT would be an invocation and a prayer. But to simply mention God is insufficient to make it either.

      So many Christians in America think that non-Christians are also non-patriots that it's almost taken for granted as fact.

      I'm sure there must be some that believe that, but everyone I know knows the difference between a Christian and a patriot. YMMV.

      My choice to do the American thing by tolerating and respecting your beliefs prevents me from reciting a patriotic oath. Your god has denied me part of my American legacy.

      With all due respect, that conclusion is silly. You may recite the entire oath and just OMIT the words "Under God." That way everyone else may participate in the Pledge as written and you, by leaving the offending words out, can participate in the Pledge and not say something in which you do not believe. It's as simple as that.

      As I mentioned elsewhere, I am Protestant but my wife is Catholic and we live in Mexico (90%+ Catholic). We go to Catholic mass. Most of it is compatible with my beliefs; but there are some sections--especially referring to praising the Virgin Mary--which I do not believe in. I participate in the prayers with everyone else and just don't recite the lines that refer to praising the Virgin Mary. It works great!

      Lately, people seem to think that as an American they have the right to live without being offended or without hearing viewpoints that they don't agree with. That's not a right that has been established by the Constitution.

    60. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Sinistar2k · · Score: 2
      How about CEO's making 100's of millions of dollars, while we have a whole class of folks working everyday with no medical insurance, how about the fact so many corporations have moved plants that used to employ Americans, to other countries to avoid paying decent wages, insurance, and social security taxes?

      Heh... You do know what would fix those, don't you? A communistic style of society. :)

    61. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Yunzil · · Score: 2

      Enough is enough. I am so tired of the "politically correct" bullshit that I could throw up.

      So enforcing the Constitution is now "politically correct bullshit"? So much for America then.

      The fact is this nation is a nation under God.

      This is a nation. Whether it's under God is a matter of opinion, which the government should not be interfering with.

    62. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by dpayton · · Score: 2, Informative
      I wonder if you're aware of the fact that the Continental Congress that debated over and hammered out the First Amendment was the same one that instituted those chaplins you have a problem with. The founding fathers were not trying to expunge all mention of religion from government (there are many things they did that point this out). What they were trying to do was keep corruption out of religion, and keep the requirement of a particular religion out of government.

      The Church of England had been established as the official religion of England, and, seeing how that adversely affected both the church and the government, the founding fathers wanted to insure that no religion got some official governmental seal of approval. They did not want an established state religion. We do not have one. Creating a voluntary time to say the Pledge of Allegiance does not force anyone to align themselves with any religion that believes in a Supreme Being. Omit the phrase, or don't say the whole thing. That's freedom of religion.

      By the way, Thomas Jefferson, who coined the phrase "seperation of church and state" was out of the country when the debate over the First Amendment took place. He used that phrase in a (very short) letter, and used it in a very limited sense. The Danbury, CT Baptists wanted assurances that government would not interfere with religion, and TJ was reassuring them that it wouldn't. That's all he meant by it in the letter. Others, of course, have projected their own definitions.

      The term "under God" simply recognizes that the vast majority of those who founded this country did so with this guiding prinicipal; that this new country would only prosper and remain free if it was "under God". That's why any other "under X" is meaningless.

    63. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't want anything *imposing* their religious views on you, right?

      How come that rule does not apply to you *forcing* your religious views (or athiesm) on others via court decisions?

      I guess your motto is 'do as i say, not as i do'

    64. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jesus christ, offended by 'in god we trust' on your cash? if you don't like it - get the fuck out of the US :)

    65. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by dpayton · · Score: 1

      So ironic that the same guys who debated and debated over the First Amendment also opened their sessions in prayer. Since they didn't consider it to violate the very Constitution they were taking such great pains to write, how is it that we know better?

    66. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by thomas.galvin · · Score: 1

      Judeo-Christian? There is no such thing. Christianity comes from almost purely pagan sources.

      Roman Christianity; that is, the Christianity that evolved after it became the official state religion, does indeed have many pagan influences. The Catholic church was also rather fond of co-opting pagan holidays and rituals, to "ease conversion." So, in a sense, you are right; what most people consider "Christianity" has a great deal of un-christian influence. Real Christianity, however, is based simply on what the Bible says.

      Christmas and Easter are pagan.

      The dates are, as is the origin of the Easter's name. The meaning behinde these holdiays, however, is purely Christain (well, that and capitalist, but I'm not going to go off on that one.) Not a whole lot of pagan societies were celebrating the birth or resurection of the Messiah.

      Christians don't observe any jewish days, not the sabbath, not even passover.

      Good Friday is our passover. Jesus said "The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.(Mark 2:27)," so we do look at the Sabbath as legalistically as the Jewish people, but the bible also says "Dont forsake gathering together, as some have done(Hebrews 10:24)." We tend to gather on Sunday instead of Saturday because that is the day of our Lord's ressurection.

      If calling something Judeo-Christian is legit, why not Judeo-Christo-Islamic? Islam also claims jewish ancestry and the jewish God. Why doesn't anyone say Judeo-Christo-Islamic?

      Because it would be innacurate. The link between Judaism and Christianity can be traced through the both the Hebrew and Christian scriptures. Their holy books form our Old Testament, and in these scriptures are a fair number of prophecies relating to the coming Messiah. Jesus said that he and the Father (Yahweh, the Jewish God) were one, and that anyone who had seen Him had seen the Father(John 14:9). Furthermore, we are told to give glory to God through His son, Jesus Christ (1 Peter 4:11). Esentially, Christians are Jews who have acknowledged the Messiah, and are therefore no longer bound by the law of Hebrew scripture, but by the law of God written on our hearts (Romans 2:15). We worship the same God, but the Bible tells us that because Jesus was rejected by the Jews, the Gentiles (that'd be everyon else) have the opportunity to be saved. The Bible says "Now if some of the branches were broken off, and you, though a wild olive branch, were grafted in among them, and have come to share in the rich root of the cultivated olive tree(Romans 11:17)." The Olive Tree is the Jewish nation, and the gentiles are the branches that have been graphted into their faith. This section is also a wonderful treatise against anti-semitism.

      Islam can claim none of this. Allah is a Ballish moon god, one of many worshiped in Muhammed's homeland, which is why the cresent moon is considered an Islamic symbol. Islam also teaches that the Hebrew scriptures have been corrupted, and that the Koran is the only "true" revelation of god. The claim Jesus was a prophet, but not "The Prophet," a title held by Muhammed. Further, the law of the Koran is considerable harsher than the law of the Bible; we are told to seperate ourselves from the world; they are told to kill all those pagans who will not convert, and all Jews and Christians who will not pay an infidel tax (it's ok to be a heritic, as long as you pay up?).

    67. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by thomas.galvin · · Score: 1

      Be offended by a suprise left hook you receive while you're buying your morning coffee at Starbuck$! Be offended by turning on you television and seeing murder and corruption on the evening news! Be offended by having YOUR tax dollars spent on arguing a trivial issue, such as this one, in a court of law!

      We have these things, by and large, because of the secularization of our country. God-fearing folk don't do these sorts of things.

    68. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      I know it means God. It even refers to the same God that the Hebrews and Christans believe in. Now why don't YOU try reciting it with Allah and see how many stupid people go apeshit?

    69. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by thomas.galvin · · Score: 1

      It therefore follows that public (re: government-run) schools are not suitable institutions for education, because forces external to educators (and families of students) are restricting freedom of speech and expression. The time has come to do away with the public education system. The education of children, like the feeding of children, should be 100% the responsibility of the parents anyway. Parents who fail to provide an education for their children should be found guilty of neglect. Education funding for impoverished families should be handled via AFDC and charity, rather than through a department of education. Quality control of schools could be handled just like the universities are regulated today, only acredited schools could award valid diplomas.

      Well, given the SCOTUS ruling that vouchers to private schools are legal, I don't think it will have to go that far; parents will hopefully now be given the choice to send their children, and their tax money, to whatever schools they feel do the best job. The underperforming schools will simply dry up and go away. Capitalism at work.

    70. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jews aren't Christians but do believe in God. But this isn't about Jesus of Nazareth. I'm sure you don't believe everything that comes out of your mouth. Ever tell a lie? And now everyone is worrried about saying something they don't believe. Personal integrity gets slapped in the face by hypocrisy once again.

    71. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because someone disagrees with you doesn't make them an extremist. Precendent doesn't make it Constitutional. Tyranny of the majority is still tyranny, and still wrong.

    72. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Golias · · Score: 2
      1. I agree that most state constitutions would need to be amended before educaiton could be privitized (there is nothing in the US Constitution that insists the schools be publicly run, however.)

      2. Privaite school does not necessarilly mean religious school. In fact, were there no public schools, the vast majority of private ones taking up the slack in out culture would probably not be religious. The only reason most private schools are religious now is because most of the parents pulling their kids out of public schools are doing so for religious reasons.

      3. Yes, this would be an additional financial burden on families, to the tune of about $3000 - $8000 per year per child. Of course, it would also mean that taxes would plummet (especially state and local taxes, the bulk of which are spent on education).

      4. Extremely poor families are still expected to feed and clothe their own kids, are they not? Education is also a basic need, which parents have a responsibility to provide. The dirtly little secret that a lot of libertarians who support this sort of move don't like to talk about is that it would require that we expand the welfare state, giving out education money via AFDC to those families who need aid in order to send their kids to school.

      4. Universities are not becoming impossible to attend if you are not rich or gifted. Pell grants still exist, as do low-interest student loans. That asside, I was not holding up Universities as an example of how to manage costs (most colleges are directly subsidized by the states, so being wasteful is an easy trap for them). The reason I brought up Universities is their system of acrediting programs assures that a degree from a major university means something, and High Schools could use a similar system for validating the worth of their diplomas.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    73. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Golias · · Score: 2
      In addition to the usual typos, I see that my haste led me to number my points 1, 2, 3, 4, 4.

      Yet another shining example of what a good, solid public education can do for you. :)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    74. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Golias · · Score: 2
      You misunderstand. Radically. When I say that the education is 100% the parents responsibility, I mean it would be their responsibility to place the kid in a school. Feeding the kid is their responsibility, but we don't expect all parents to be farmers.

      How would AFDC help? By granting money to the parent which would be used for tuition.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    75. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Cowboy · · Score: 1
      How about One Nation Under Shiva?


      actually, that would probably make these United States a hell of a lot more interesting place to live...
    76. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the "In god We Trust" part on money, just do what I do, get a black marker and cross it out. If enough of us start doing this, I'd bet that you'll come across money that someone else had done this to.

      Every time I get money from the bank, this is the first thing I do.

    77. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Robert+The+Coward · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly think, with the amount of support for public school funding by the government today, that the funding for this kind of project would be anywhere near enough?

      Have you looked at the numbers. If I rember the amout right the amount given to a school system for 1 Student in DC would be enf. to fund 3 Students in many private schools. I bet they would get a much better school to boot.

    78. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by killthiskid · · Score: 2

      I'm responding to the NA so people can see his post (this is the child of that post):


      Just because someone disagrees with you doesn't make them an extremist. Precendent doesn't make it Constitutional. Tyranny of the majority is still tyranny, and still wrong.

      Thanks, NA


      Now, as for you, letxa2000, you sure are hot on this issue. I'll grant you this: 'Under God' is not the same as slaverly, however, my purpose was not to compare slaverly and 'Under God', my purpose was to show how your argument is weak. I'll reiterate: doing something today because it is what you did yesterday is void of thought, logic, or progress. There, dead horse flogged.


      Next up: I am not an extremist. I am EXTREMELY patriotic. I have served my country in the military. While I am not currently in the military, if I was ever needed again, I would be there in a heart beat. They won't need to draft me.


      Now, here is how I am patriotic: I value the freedom of this country. I value my freedom of religion (or lack thereof). I value, very greatly, the seperation of church and state.


      All of these things keep my free. Removing 'under god' is another step towards freedom. Why should you care if 'god' has been removed from the pledge? You have removed something from my life that I do not want, and you have lost nothing: you still have god. You still have your faith, your church, your friends, and your religion.


      So, if the time has come, if the culture has changed, and "Under GOD" has to go, you know what I say to you? Same thing you said to me: Tough.


      Woah, not very nice to be on that side of things, is it?

      In a word, "tough." There are 270 million people in this country. It's impossible to please all of them all of the time. But to say that the current Pledge isn't part of American culture and tradition because a few percentage points of the population doesn't like it is to distort the definition of "culture" which, by definition, is a collective entity. The Pledge IS part of your culture even though you might not like that part of the culture.

      Ya' know what? You're right, we can't please everyone. But there is a major difference between pleasing/not pleasing and actively pissing people off.


      The new pledge: One nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all...


      Now that's freedom.


    79. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Dastardly · · Score: 1

      I think the court did screw up here. It probably should have declared the 1953 law adding the words under god unconstituional. Not the entire pledge or even saying it in school.

      Can you name another law that specifically mandates that God be referred to? I don't think money has a law that says it should say "In God we Trust". But, it was designed that way, so it is no big deal.

      The pledge was said for 100years without under god, and only in the last 50 without it. So, there is no tradition of the pledge including under god, I woudl say it is the exact opposite. Therefore, I think there is no question that Congress enacted a law that made a religious statement which is blatantly unconstitutional.

    80. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      however, my purpose was not to compare slaverly and 'Under God', my purpose was to show how your argument is weak. I'll reiterate: doing something today because it is what you did yesterday is void of thought, logic, or progress

      I understand that point of view. My point was simply to mention that the Supreme Court has already been asked to review prayers in legislatures, etc. It was deemed acceptable because it had become an accepted part of society. The Pledge, based on reaction in the last 24 hours, is also an accepted part of our society although that doesn't necessarily mean that 100% of the population likes it.

      I am EXTREMELY patriotic. I have served my country in the military. While I am not currently in the military, if I was ever needed again, I would be there in a heart beat. They won't need to draft me.

      Let me say that I honestly salute you for having served our country. I respect that. I have not served, but not for a lack of trying--they wouldn't take me during the Gulf War because I occasionally need medicine to control minor asthma. I guess I can understand that...

      Removing 'under god' is another step towards freedom. Why should you care if 'god' has been removed from the pledge?

      For exactly the reason that the decision will be overturned: Because it has become a part of our culture.

      In 1954 I would have thought it inappropriate to have it added. I'm surprised it wasn't challenged. But since I grew up with the Pledge as it is I don't want to see it reduced. I would be equally upset if they removed "indivisible" from the Pledge.

      So, if the time has come, if the culture has changed, and "Under GOD" has to go, you know what I say to you? Same thing you said to me: Tough.

      IF times have changed.

      They haven't. And that's reflected in the reaction of this country. The senate passed a 99-0 resolution oppposing the decision and senators have promised that if the decision is not corrected by a higher court they will fix it in Congress. The CNN poll (non-scientific, I know) shows at least 75% opposing the decision.

      And the judge that issued the ruling has already issued a stay of that ruling.

      So, I'm afraid, the times haven't changed. And that's why the decision is receiving so much flack.

      But there is a major difference between pleasing/not pleasing and actively pissing people off.

      Yep. Leaving things the way the majority of this country has grown up learning the Pledge is about pleasing/not pleasing people. Actively modifying the Pledge we learned in our childhood is actively pissing people off.

      Ironically, I think this whole issue is only going to solidify "Under God" in our Pledge.

    81. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by lateralus_1024 · · Score: 1

      "Allah is a ballish moon god" A muslim would consider this a direct insult to Yaweh and Your Christian God. The crescent moon is a symbol of Islam because they go by the Lunar calendar, nothing more. Islam states that upon judgement day, Muhammed & Jesus Christ will come back together. Just pointing out some facts that they teach us in World History 101. I advise you look into getting a college/university education rather than a church one your parents adopted you into.

      --
      If you think /. comments are bad, check out Digg.
    82. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by irony+nazi · · Score: 1

      This reply is offtopic, but I just wanted to help this story become the #1 all time story on the Slashdot Hall of fame list.

      --

      Bringing irony to the Slash-masses
    83. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by iamwhatiseem · · Score: 1

      The point I am making is when will it stop.It is no better that the rights of the few, in this case very few, should supercede the rights of the masses.The point the other guy made about the fact that we are a Republic and not a Democracy is absolutely correct, however, a true Republic is impossible and would be just as bad as a true Democracy. In a true Republic, almost anything that upset anyone would have to be considered. Take for instance Bikinis, they certainly don't upset me (on the contrary) but what about the religous orginazations that this is a direct sin to them, should all women be required to wear clothes that cover themselves up because of those few folks that it upsets??? Huh?

    84. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, just look at how interesting life in India is!

    85. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by thomas.galvin · · Score: 1

      "Allah is a ballish moon god" A muslim would consider this a direct insult to Yaweh and Your Christian God. The crescent moon is a symbol of Islam because they go by the Lunar calendar, nothing more.

      A muslim can consider it whatever they want, but the fact is that Allah is one of several pagan dieties that were worshiped by Muhammed's people. The fact that Muhammed "promoted" him to the "One True God," and claimed that he was the same god as the Chirstians and the Jews, does not make it true, nor does it change history. If you look through the religious artifacts and records of his time for Allah or his symbols, you will see that his was their god of the moon, and one of several that were worshiped.

      Islam states that upon judgement day, Muhammed & Jesus Christ will come back together.

      As I said, they consider Jesus a prophet.

      Just pointing out some facts that they teach us in World History 101. I advise you look into getting a college/university education rather than a church one your parents adopted you into.

      I actually have a college education. I also have the sense to look beyonde what they taught me in World History 101. Religion is an important topic to me, and I choose to get more in depth than an intro course.

      Also, little of what I have written this week comes from my church. I have only been a christian for 10 months or so, and I do not belong to the church of my parents...what I write is not what I have been indoctrinated with, but what I have studied and found to be true.

    86. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by mikehoskins · · Score: 1

      You go. Shame on ./'ers marking this as a troll. Why? Just because he gave a dissenting opinion, to another dissenting opinion?

      Crazy.

    87. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by NumberSyx · · Score: 2

      Allah is a Ballish moon god

      I dare you to back this up with historical data, no Christian propaganda sites, please.

      --

      "Our products just aren't engineered for security,"
      -Brian Valentine,VP in charge of MS Windows Development

    88. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Omitting it would not prohibit the free exercise of religion. If the pledge said "under NO god", then it would be prohibiting.

    89. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How about CEO's making 100's of millions of dollars, while we have a whole class of folks working everyday with no medical insurance, how about the fact so many corporations have moved plants that used to employ Americans, to other countries to avoid paying decent wages, insurance, and social security taxes?

      So you _are_ a communist. From each according to his means, to each according to his needs.

      It pisses me off how many ppl use communism as a synonym for evil.

    90. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you trying to say that religious people don't commit crimes?

  2. $$, too by gralem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm filing a suit against all US currency! It's unconstitutional!!!

    1. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      How are we going to pay you if you win?

    2. Re:$$, too by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      I'm filing a suit against all US currency! It's unconstitutional!!!

      If it bothers you that much, I can dispose of it for you ...

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    3. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Really, there's a difference between saying something every day before schoolchildren-- highly impressionable people whose beliefs and views of the world are not fully formed-- and making them feel all wierd, like they're not doing something they're supposed to do, if they don't say it along, and making them feel like outcasts, like everyone is different from them and there's something wrong with them, if they don't agree with the words
      -- and printing a mention of God on some publicly distributed government items.

      The first has an undeniable aspect of coersion. The latter, less so.

      If a child sees "in god we trust" on currency, they walk away with the impression "i live in a nation more or less full of christians", which is more or less accurate. If a child has the pledge of allegience drilled into them every single day in their place of learning, they walk away with the impression "i am expected to be christian", which is wrong and a signal the government should not be sending.

      I would expect 90% of the people who are upset over this decision are upset because they want the government to send the signal to children that they are expected to be christian.

    4. Re:$$, too by JonWan · · Score: 1

      How about Gold Bullion? ;-)

    5. Re:$$, too by joe52 · · Score: 1

      With the way the dollar has been doing lately I'll take Euros.

    6. Re:$$, too by robman · · Score: 1

      Two tons of flax

      --
      "Perl 6 will give you the big knob." -Larry Wall
    7. Re:$$, too by pauldy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Or they are upset because people are using insignificant gestures as a means to sue the government for money, which is exactly what this guy was doing. While your logic sounds ok like most liberal/socialist views it is very narrow in its view and looks only at the here and now. The pledge of allegiance is for the United States of America founded by Christians and predominantly just that. To please the liberal's yes there were others here first the use of the term founded is to indicate when they arrive a movement was started that developed us into the country we are today. I think 100% of the people who are opposed to the pledge of allegiance are so because they don't like to be reminded of their minority status. I for one am Christian so I know I am biased and I won't claim not to be but I also feel that we are focusing in this country way to much on pleasing minority interests for political gain because we have been convinced it is the right thing to do. I'm starting to get the feeling this may only be in the interests of the minorities and in the best interests of the country as a whole. And I do fear were this type of liberal/socialist attitude will lead this country over the next decade. I know this Michael Newdow isn't thinking about it he just wants his monetary return and I wonder sometimes when we stopped thinking about the long term effects of our actions in favor of what is going to effect me here and now.

    8. Re:$$, too by Semi-Psychic+Nathan · · Score: 1

      FIVE TONS OF FLAX!

      --
      I have nothing to allude to, and I am alluding to it.
    9. Re:$$, too by cruelworld · · Score: 2

      Damn discordians....

      this is all your doing! Isn't it!!!!!!

    10. Re:$$, too by Atryn · · Score: 1

      Why am I suspiscious that you are a male caucasian too?

      --
      Come play Moral Decay!
    11. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      He isn't seeking any compensation, if you took some time to read about the case you would have found that out.

    12. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With PayPal!

      *ducks and runs*

    13. Re:$$, too by FireWhenRady · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The pledge of allegiance is for the United States of America founded by Christians and predominantly just that.

      Funny enough, that is completely wrong. Many of the writers of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were "freethinkers" like Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, John Adams, John Hancock etc. who created the United States specifically to avoid the Christian hegemony in Europe. Three of the first 5 presidents were Unitarians, not orthodox Christians.

      The most important influence on early American political though was the anti-clerical Enlightment of Europe and the writings of such atheists as Thomas Paine and Voltaire.

      The Virginia Acts of Toleration that Jefferson fought so hard for, were advocated by a coalition of Unitarians and Baptists, neither of whom wanted the the colonial Episcopalian church to become sanctioned by the government and to forbid their own. In those days, fundementalist Christianity was persecuted badly and it was the atheists who fought hardest to give Baptists and Evangelicals (Non-conformists) the right to exist and to worship as they chose.

    14. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when you decide to have a husband instead of a wife and end up paying roughly 1million in extra insurance over my life, feel free to speak again..

      otherwise just shut the fuck up

    15. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well put :). The US is a christian-biased country where church and state are not truly separate.

    16. Re:$$, too by the_truk_stop · · Score: 1

      > they [have] the impression "i am expected to be christian"

      That's ludicrous. (1) Using your logic, why don't they come back confused as to whether they should be Jewish OR Christian? (2) I would personally love to see a kid come back with such an opinion, because I would assume that they would also get out of school thinking "Gee, it wouldn't be good to grow up into a 24-year-old Californian and help Al Queda attack the country, since I'm supposed to give my allegiance to the US".

      > a signal the government should not be sending

      Well heck, let's all just choose to do what we feel like. "The government set up laws telling me that I'll be punished for raping some guy's wife and murdering his daughter. I'm getting the sense that the government doesn't want me harming that guy's family, which is obviously some sort of attack on my freedom." NO! While I respect your viewpoint, I heartily disagree with your subjective logic.

      -- Truk

    17. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps slightly offtopic, but useful to keep in mind in light of the subject are H.L. Mencken's words:
      "I believe that religion, generally speaking, has been a curse to mankind - that its modest and greatly overestimated services on the ethical side have been more than overcome by the damage it has done to clear and honest thinking."

    18. Re:$$, too by pauldy · · Score: 1

      And if you read anything you would see he was seeking compensation.

    19. Re:$$, too by pauldy · · Score: 1

      Whya re you suspiscious of this. Is it bad to be a male caucasion?

    20. Re:$$, too by howlingfrog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You attempt the following as an illustrative paraphrasing of the post you're responding to:

      ...I'm getting the sense that the government doesn't want me harming that guy's family, which is obviously some sort of attack on my freedom.

      Your attempt was, however, a miserable failure. This example differs from the government telling us what religion to believe in a substantial way, relevant to the discussion.

      As I see it, and as there is reason to believe the Founders saw it, the role of government is to protect the freedom of its citizens. If I "rape some guy's wife and murder his daughter," I'm infringing on the freedom of that family to live their own life. If the government tells the same guy's daughter she's supposed to believe in God, it's infringing on the freedom of that family to live their own life (clearly to a lesser degree, but you get that when you use extreme examples). A government whose goal is the protection of freedom should condemn both acts.

      --
      The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    21. Re:$$, too by pauldy · · Score: 1

      Why is what I said wrong? Everyone you mentioned in retort still had basic Christian beliefs with the exception of Jefferson. And why are Paine and Voltaire atheists? Is this your personal label of them? Voltaire would be on the possibly side based of his writings but not Paine.

      As I understood them the Virginia acts were more or less to prevent a particular order from becoming that of the state. How does this give anyone the right to exist or worship as they choose and even more so how does this make atheists the saviors of religious freedom.

      You use a lot of facts here most people wouldn't know but they don't seem to support what you said to begin with that I was somehow wrong in my statement that the United States was founded by christians and is still predominantly still just that a nation of people who believe in god and trust in god.

      This doesn't mean that there are any ill feelings from me aside from the real issue, which is the catering towards the minority views. No matter how pretty a picture you try and paint more people in this country believe in god than don't. This 9th district appeals court that ruled on this particular issue after more research has been overruled more than any other court in the United States period. I think this factoid in and of itself speaks volumes. What makes our country great and special is our freedom to do, not the freedom to limit what the majority does in order to consider the special emotional and coddling needs of the minority.

      If again you think I'm wrong in any of this show me were I can learn it for myself because I like many of your so called free thinkers frequently question what I am told or read in search of my own truth.

    22. Re:$$, too by pauldy · · Score: 1

      Another question does that last statement in and of itself make me an atheist?

    23. Re:$$, too by Danse · · Score: 1

      I'll take a few dozen virgins :)

      Err... females... christ on a cracker, I forgot where I'm posting!

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    24. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems that at one moment, everyone wants children to be thought of as rational adults, and that they are capable of making their own decisions. In other words, we should be able to reason with children and show them the facts, and then they can come up with their own decision. However, the next moment, we make claims that children are impressionable, that they cannot make decisions for themselves, and that we must take extra care for them not to become corrupted with another person's ideas. There are so many rants that we could make from here; however, that is not the point.

      The point I want to refute is this:

      "If a child sees 'in god we trust' on currency, they walk away with the impression 'i live in a nation more or less full of christians', which is more or less accurate. If a child has the pledge of allegience drilled into them every single day in their place of learning, they walk away with the impression 'i am expected to be christian', which is wrong and a signal the government should not be sending."

      I don't know what kind of school you went to, but most people would not agree with your above statement. I know I certainly don't. In fact, I fail to see the relevance of your statement with regards to the issue at hand. Did you actually read the news article? I am assuming you didn't due to your statement. The article states that the students are not forced or required to say the pledge of allegiance.

      Quote from the Reuter's news article:
      "While Newdow's daughter -- like other U.S. students -- was not required to recite the pledge, he said she was nevertheless hurt by being forced to 'watch and listen as her state-employed teacher in her state-run school leads her classmates in a ritual proclaiming that there is a God.'"

      The first point I want to make is that we seem to be inundated with people who want to sue for money and attention.

      Quote from the Reuter's news article:
      "'Government should not thrust a religious idea down my throat,' Newdow said on Wednesday"

      In no way is the government trying to ram anything down anyone's throat, not Newdow nor his daughter. All this guy wants is attention, that and money. He wants to get his name in the history books as a...whoops, better not say that, I might "hurt" someone.

      The second point is what are we trying to instill into the American public with this? Are we trying to show everyone that we are just a bunch of whimps? This reminds me of two immature little children. "Mommy! Johnnie looked at me wrong!". "Daddy! Suzy stuck her tongue out at me!". Boo hoo,

      The last point is:
      Give me a break! If all it takes to get a lawsuit (or into the courts) is the little fact that you are forced to listen to something you may not like, then I'm gonna be a rich man! I have to listen to idiots all day long. The money should be rolling in for me!

      I highly doubt the girl is truly offended by this. It is most likely that daddy told her to say this so daddy could get some attention.

      Just my two cents....

    25. Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post is long and scattered, and i have work to do, so i am not going to even attempt a point-by-point response to what you have said. I will attempt to pick out the specific important parts and respond to them; if i missed some, i apologize.

      I don't know what kind of school you went to, but most people would not agree with your above statement. I know I certainly don't

      I went to a school in rural, predominantly southern baptist texas. I am assuming you didn't.

      Give me a break! If all it takes to get a lawsuit (or into the courts) is the little fact that you are forced to listen to something you may not like, then I'm gonna be a rich man! I have to listen to idiots all day long. The money should be rolling in for me!

      No. What it takes to get a lawsuit into the courts is that government officials or laws are acting in a way that outsteps the bounds clearly demarcated by the bill of rights. If the people saying something you "may not like" are government employees, and the things they are saying that you "may not like" are indicating an expectation on the part of the government for you to hold certain religious beliefs. If that's the case, you have a lawsuit, go for it. Anything else is a private citizen expressing themselves in a public place, and totally legal, unless it falls under the jurisdiction of public nuisance or harrassment laws in your area.

      As is, i assume the "idiots" you have to listen to every day are either people who you deal with as part of your job, or family members? If so, these are people you are not REQUIRED, certainly not by the state, to spend any time listening to. School attendence, meanwhile, is mandatory for children ~5-17.

      I highly doubt the girl is truly offended by this. It is most likely that daddy told her to say this so daddy could get some attention.

      Or that daddy asked her nicely to say it so that he could create a legal test case, because he is offended his child is subjected to the pledge of allegience every day, and he wants to have control over the religious signals his child is exposed to while growing up. "Attention" has nothing to do with it. Just, someone had to do it. If you're going to have a civil rights case, you need a plantiff.

      --

      Some children are impressionable. Some children can make their own decisions. It varies, and people charged with taking care of children need to be careful. I don't think it's the culture's job to raise the child-- i.e. i don't think we should be bowlderizing TV and media and all these things to prevent the "fragile children" from being somehow hurt-- but that is just because those groups are not the ones responsible for the upbringing of that child. Schools, meanwhile, ARE responsible for the upbringing of that child, and ARE authority figures in that child's life. Therefore they have a certain responsibility to not impose certain things on the child because they A) have the ability to directly guide the development of that child B) exist solely for the teaching and development of children and C) do not have the parental authority to decide what is best for that child.

      Schools are there to lay information out in front of children so they can understand the world they live in and make informed decisions about it. Schools are not there to tell children what to believe.

      - - -

      The article states that the students are not forced or required to say the pledge of allegiance.

      This is not relevant.

      In no way is the government trying to ram anything down anyone's throat

      This is not correct.

      Of course i read the article. Did you read anything else? These two italisized statements above are the crux of your post; the entire point of my original post, as well as the entire point of many posts in this thread, are that these two statements are incorrect. I refer you to any of the myriad threads in this slashdot story asking the question of how you, or any parent, would feel if the pledge of allegiance said "under Allah" instead of "under God". (Yes, many do consider "God" to be a specific name for a specific god, and not some abstraction. And children-- whether impressionable or no-- are, unquestionably, incredibly easy to confuse.)

      If you have never lived in a minority religious position, it is very difficult to understand what it is like. Especially from the eyes of a child. Children often ridicule to nonexistence all that is different from them; if the school environment is such that the child senses they will be harmed, or unwelcome, or worst of all frowned on by the teacher, if they express their religion, they will bury and generally hide that religion. Usually.

      The important thing is this: It does not matter whether they are forced to say the pledge or not. It only matters whether the impression is being conveyed to the child that they are expected to say the pledge. Forced or no. They are in a situation where the teacher makes it clear this is what we do at the beginning of class every day, and this is effective to the same thing as being forced. A young child is not in the position to realize i don't have to do this if i don't want to or if i don't do this and everyone else does, it doesn't mean there's something wrong with me. A child at the age of 5 is still learning slowly what the concept of rules are. No, the child is not forced. But the child is coerced, and this is bad enough for at least one circuit court to consider it unconstitutional.

      What this is about is ensuring that teachers are presented to the child as advocates of tolerance-- an idea somewhat anathemic to the idea of the teacher getting up every morning and leading all the children in an affirmation that they all believe in the state and the flag and god. However small this may be in the end, this is something quite different from suing becuase little timmy poked little suzie with a stick and that's sexual harrasment.

      - - -

      Sometimes the important thing is not whether the majority would agree with you, but whether you are right.

    26. Re:$$, too by muleboy · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, that's the most unintelligible
      piece of writing I have seen all month!

    27. Re:$$, too by bytesmythe · · Score: 1

      Flooz? Oh, wait... never mind.

      --
      bytesmythe
      Hypocrisy is the resin that holds the plywood of society together.
      -- Scott Meyer
    28. Re:$$, too by Atryn · · Score: 1

      No, in fact I am one. The simple fact is that male caucasion christians typically do not understand what it means to be in the minority, to be persecuted for things that cannot be changed.

      I don't profess to understand the plight of racial minorities, but I was singled out as a child and persecuted for my religious beliefs -- Something that was only public knowledge because I refused to recite the words "Under God" in the pledge. It was an invasion of my privacy and placed me in front of a group of students (most of whom knew less about their religions than I did) who were being told by the "state" that I was different and 'wrong' compared to them.

      --
      Come play Moral Decay!
    29. Re:$$, too by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      That's ludicrous. (1) Using your logic, why don't they come back confused as to whether they should be Jewish OR Christian? (2) I would personally love to see a kid come back with such an opinion, because I would assume that they would also get out of school thinking "Gee, it wouldn't be good to grow up into a 24-year-old Californian and help Al Queda attack the country, since I'm supposed to give my allegiance to the US".

      Correct, instead you'd see a kid coming back saying "God wants me to bomb abortion clinics!" Rediculous yes, but no more so than your assertion that children who don't have Christianity drilled into them at school (isn't that more a domain of the parents?) grow up to be terrorists.

      Well heck, let's all just choose to do what we feel like. "The government set up laws telling me that I'll be punished for raping some guy's wife and murdering his daughter. I'm getting the sense that the government doesn't want me harming that guy's family, which is obviously some sort of attack on my freedom." NO! While I respect your viewpoint, I heartily disagree with your subjective logic.

      The government should not be sponsoring religions, with the possible exception of tax-purposes.

    30. Re:$$, too by pauldy · · Score: 1

      And I was single out for my last name and made fun of on a daily basis. I was a nerd in school and didn't find it to be all that great of an experience either. The thing I had going for me were understanding and consistent parents who cared about me and my well being. They guided me through these rough times to where I am today. I feel no animosity towards the children who taunted me or the bullies who bullied me. I am content with the fact that kids will be kids and try as you might changing their behavior it only comes with time and maturity not by removing certain stimulus that they feel was the cause for their individual plights. This itself breads individuality and a strong character. I think your assertion of how you knew about their religions better than they did is a bit asinine. To claim your knowledge of someone else's beliefs exceeds their own is arrogant to say the least.

  3. Calm Down by SpaFF · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is only the Court in the State of California.
    This is not a nationwide decision. I'm sure the U.S. Supreme court will strike it down.

    --
    -----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK----- Version: 3.12 GIT d? s: a-- C++++ UL++++ P++ L+++ E- W++ N o-- K- w--- O- M+ V PS+ P
    1. Re:Calm Down by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      No, the ruling goes for 9 states in the west, not just California.

      mark

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    2. Re:Calm Down by jasamaman · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, this is a FEDERAL court, that was LOCATED in San Fransisco. It DOES have national implications.

      --
      Someone ever tries to kill you, you try to kill them right back!
    3. Re:Calm Down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would they strike the decision down? The statement endorses religion.

    4. Re:Calm Down by dalassa · · Score: 2

      Just why is reciting the pledge every morning so important? I had to do it everyday in elementary school and it didn't make me any more patriotic. Instead it made one in the class an object of minor ridicule because she had to go outside while it was recited. I always used to make strange sentences instead of saying it as it should be and that got me more than a few notes home.

      --
      Feminism is the radical notion that women are people.
    5. Re:Calm Down by VikingBerserker · · Score: 1

      That's not entirely correct. Although the court itself is located in CA, it serves a number of west coast states on a Federal level. As a result, we're all affected.

      The only level that can strike it down now is the U.S. Supreme Court. Let's hope they do so.

    6. Re:Calm Down by KCRWreck · · Score: 1

      Actually, it can also go before the FULL 9th Federal Court as well as the Supreme Court.

      Just FYI

    7. Re:Calm Down by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      Hmmm and what was the U.S.A founded on?

      Why do I see a time comming when the U.S. separates in to three countries. The east cost and west cost and the rest of the country.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    8. Re:Calm Down by thehappygit · · Score: 1

      No, it does not (now) have national implications. Even a federal court outside of the ninth circuit can ignore this ruling. Only when (if?) this is brought before the supreme court would it have truly national implications.

    9. Re:Calm Down by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > Hmmm and what was the U.S.A founded on?

      The US was founded on the realisation that the Brittish crown couldn't actualy exert real control over its colonies in the americas, and that white land owners could be rallied together under the idea of not paying taxes unless they had some say in the process....er um I mean... it was founded on the ideals of equal liberty and justice for all people (People being a noun which means "white men over 21 who own land")

      but...just maybe I am a bit cynical?

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    10. Re:Calm Down by i0lanthe · · Score: 2

      I always used to make strange sentences instead of saying it as it should be

      I remember reading _In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson_ about a million years ago. The young english-as-second-language main character said the pledge every day without actually knowing what the words were so let's just say it wasn't quite right. I still remember bits of her interpretation: "and to the wee puppet for witches' hands ... with little tea and just rice for all."

      --
      "The Crystal Wind is the Storm, and the Storm is Data, and the Data is Life"
    11. Re:Calm Down by Jouster · · Score: 1

      > Let's hope they do so.

      Why? What fundamental part of your religious views are assaulted through the omission of one more reminder of them during the school day? We already, here in Virginia, have pre- and post-school flagpole prayer meetings, a minute of silence at the start of the day, a student-led prayer before football games (yes, I know they struck that one down, but it's still done), and Weekday Religious Education (a thin veil behind behind which hides a program which takes elementary school children during the school day for thirty minutes to have them listen to local protestant religious groups' preaching).

      I would sacrifice much of my freedom to practice my religion in any way I please to ensure that you had the opportunity to practice yours. So long as the request is not too egregious, I ask you to do the same.

      Jouster

    12. Re:Calm Down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, so kids should be made to feel ridiculed becuase they dont happen to beleive in the same religion is you? You dont think there is something wrong there?

    13. Re:Calm Down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the Supreme Court will strike it down. However, that does not make the Supreme Court's ruling Constitutional. It often hasn't been.

    14. Re:Calm Down by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      The 9th Federal Circuit court has jurisdiction over 15 states and (I think) Guam (and maybe the micronesian territories, if we still own them). It's not like they JUST server San Francisco...

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    15. Re:Calm Down by Omega1045 · · Score: 1

      Uh, no. This was not a California court, this was the Ninth Circuit Court (Federal). That means this decision not only applies to the most populated state in the Union (California), but also to Washington, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Nevada and Arizona.

      --

      Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein

    16. Re:Calm Down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you forgot that this country was pioneered by people who were escaping religious persecution? That they were looking for a place where they could practice their beliefs that were not sanctioned or penalized by government?

      The reason why we separated church and state was so that people could practice their beliefs as they saw fit and their beliefs not be dictated by government.

      The flipside is that those who did not hold religious beliefs were free from persecution also.

      I thank God(Ironically) that we do try to separate church and state. I don't want the government telling me what I should and shouldn't believe in.

  4. Currency by Fez · · Score: 0, Redundant

    So I guess the new colored US money probably shouldn't say "In God We Trust" on it.

    But I guess since the currency isn't properly backed, you have to trust someone/thing to vouch for its worth, eh?

    1. Re:Currency by ajmarks · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously espousing the goldbacker stance? You do realize that the US economy would not have been able to grow as it has under a gold or precious metals standard.

      --
      Opinions are not Informative, though they may be Insightful or Interesting.
    2. Re:Currency by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      You do realize that WorldCom, Enron, Global Crossing, et alia wouldn't have been able to have reported growth as they did under an honest accounting standard.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    3. Re:Currency by Fez · · Score: 1

      Not really, I realize it's all fine and dandy the way it is but the dollar in and of itself only has percieved value. But then, that's true of everything.

      There was also a hint of sarcasm in my original post.

      And as a clarification, I am an atheist. I really don't like "God" being mentioned all over in places like the pledge or money. However, this is a "majority rules" country that recently has taken a sour turn toward "minority rules" where one person can complain and shut down or change something many people enjoy. Until atheism is the dominant "religion" I don't expect the word "God" to stop appearing anywhere...
      </rant>

    4. Re:Currency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have no problem with its meaning....
      In Myself We Trust.

    5. Re:Currency by King_TJ · · Score: 2

      Uh, really, I think the guy was just trying to make a joke...

      But seriously, regarding the backing of U.S. dollars and coins - I'm not sure that the old idea of backing it in gold is very practical. (Gold is heavy and takes up lots of space, among other problems.)

      Still, we've transitioned to a system where currency is based completely on trust, as opposed to being based in the reality that our governmnet is "good" for every dollar and coin they mint.

      Does it happen to benefit our economy? Yeah, sure, as long as everyone is confident that our govt. is stable and not in jeopardy of toppling. I think it's fair to say that we've generally been a society that's been confident of that ever since the time of the Civil War.

      Nonetheless, it's worth considering that many powerful governments in history have fallen (AKA. Rome). There's no guarantee that the U.S. won't do the same someday....

      Therefore, if things start looking more uncertain for our nation in the future, the citizens would be wise to start demanding financial backing of some kind to their money.

    6. Re:Currency by Subcarrier · · Score: 2

      "In God We Trust"

      Other deities pay cash?

      I guess we know who gets to pick up the tab when the bar closes...

      --
      "I have opinions of my own, strong opinions, but I don't always agree with them." -- George H. W. Bush
    7. Re:Currency by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      However, this is a "majority rules" country...

      No, it is a constitutional democratic republic, wherein what the majority can do (via their elected representatives) to the minority is strictly limited. One thing the majority can't do is push a religious point of view on the minority via the mechanisms of the state. Doesn't (in theory, anyway) matter if it's a minority of one.

      Pleding alliegence to a piece of cloth is a dumb thing to do, but the state is permitted to encourage it. Pushing statements about metaphysics, however, is clearly out of its bailiwick.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    8. Re:Currency by Fez · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No, it is a constitutional democratic republic, wherein what the majority can do (via their elected representatives) to the minority is strictly limited. One thing the majority can't do is push a religious point of view on the minority via the mechanisms of the state. Doesn't (in theory, anyway) matter if it's a minority of one.

      True enough, the constitution is there to protect the minority. However, officials are elected by the majority (where the electoral college isn't involved!) and they tend to elect people who are religious. And as proved by the fact that "under god" and "in god we trust" were inserted inserted, they will try to push it.

      What irks me is that (a) it was allowed at all and (b) it took this long to come under fire. It either speaks to the fact that people who opposed it were not vocal, were afraid to speak up, or just plain didn't care. To me, the phrases had become so ubiquitous I didn't even consider them a testament to religion.

      Pleding alliegence to a piece of cloth is a dumb thing to do, but the state is permitted to encourage it. Pushing statements about metaphysics, however, is clearly out of its bailiwick.

      I agree... Here's an interesting piece outlining separation of church and state issues. (It specifically mentions the pledge and currency)

      It doesn't stop parents, of course. 13 years (k-12) of catholic school were torture. :)

    9. Re:Currency by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Cliff Stoll quotes a CIA guy in "The Cuckoo's Egg":

      In G-d* we trust, everyone else we polygraph.

      * I don't type out His name in full.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    10. Re:Currency by Golias · · Score: 1
      The various Arthur Anderson accounting scandals had nothing to do with a lack of precious metals standards.

      What Enron and others did was shift and re-define their debts & costs to make the company look stronger than it was, in order to deceive shareholders.

      The first Arthur Anderson client to be busted like this was Waste Management, Inc. They depreciated their trucks and dumpsters over longer periods than the actual lives of the equipment in order to make their expenses seem less.

      There are a some good arguments for using a gold standard, but cleaning up corporate accounting is not one of them.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    11. Re:Currency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or Her.

    12. Re:Currency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      * I don't type out His name in full.

      Who could remember all 216?
    13. Re:Currency by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      actually, the point I was trying to get at was that fake growth by "clever" accounting is no better than fake growth by inflation that you when you don't have your currency backed by anything other than "good faith and credit"

      A gold standard only wokrs if all the trading partners involved stick to it religously though.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    14. Re:Currency by Golias · · Score: 1
      A gold standard only wokrs if all the trading partners involved stick to it religously though.

      And nobody ever suddenly discovers a huge new mine that sends the price of gold into a spiral.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  5. please... by farfolen · · Score: 1

    pffffffffffffffft...allow me to excercise my first amendment right in saying that this ruling is crap and won't stand up if it makes it past this level of apellate court. hell, probably won't make it past a gathering of the entire court (this ruling was made by a "panel", or portion of the actual court it's ruling was handed down from. they can call the rest of the court in order to rule on it again, which is probably what will happen).

    --
    werd to yo motha, muh nizzle.
    1. Re:please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There seems to be a hint of a misunderstanding here. They didn't say that the words were inconstitutional, they just said that passing a law to add them was. You can say them if you want to, heck you can even keep using them in your pledge if you want to, but officially, the government cannot insert the the word God, or any statement acknowledging God into any official text, as it clearly violates the first amendment which specifically says "Congress shall pass no law respecting an establishment of religion...". Thus, congress passing a law that instructs citizens to acknowledge the existance of God (it does have a capital G, indicating that the Christian God is the one being referenced) is clearly a direct violation of the first amendment. This ruling is not crap, and WILL stand up to any appeal or scrutiny. When congress passed the law, which Eisenhower approved on June 14th, 1954 they were in fact violating their oath of office, which is to uphold the constitution. Heres a nice history of the changes the Pledge has gone through.

  6. Not Pledge, But Act Of Congress Adding "Under God" by sqlzealot · · Score: 2, Informative

    The court has struck down the specific 1954 act of congress inserting "Under God" into the pledge.

    --
    "Overhead, without any fuss, the stars were going out."
  7. Eisenhower's Fault by e1en0r · · Score: 5, Informative

    It was Eisenhower who added the "under God" part of the Pledge of Allegiance. You can read about it here.

    1. Re:Eisenhower's Fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, Eisenhower really fucked a bunch of things up, didn't he? I hate that guy.

      We're still recovering from Eisenhower's America, and not very well.

    2. Re:Eisenhower's Fault by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 0, Troll

      Maybe it was God's fault for existing.

    3. Re:Eisenhower's Fault by spencerogden · · Score: 1

      Obviously you don't live in Fance(not that I do, and not that his actions as general make him a good pres... )

    4. Re:Eisenhower's Fault by Dephex+Twin · · Score: 1

      Just because he was an important general naturally doesn't mean he'd be a good president. And he was, in fact, awful IMO. This is not the first time that the people improperly awarded a good general with the presidency. It also happened with Ulysses S Grant. And he was a drunk that had tons of corruption all over the place.

      So maybe it's not a good way to go.

      mark

      --

      If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe. -- Carl Sagan
    5. Re:Eisenhower's Fault by kitzilla · · Score: 1

      Okay, he's unconsitutional, too...

      --
      This is my post. There are many others like it. If you don't like what you read here, go try one of the others.
  8. Simmer down by Torgo's+Pizza · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Before the comments start to get out of hand, I'd like to point out that this will almost certainly be overturned by the Supreme Court. The Ninth Circuit has pulled this stunt many a time before, only to have it overturned or reverse itself later.

    1. Re:Simmer down by farfolen · · Score: 2, Informative

      in all likelihood, if it makes it to the supreme court level, the court will just refuse to hear it. they've made comments in previous rulings that said the actual text of the pledge wasn't unconstitutional...only coercing people to speak it (i.e. requiring it).

      --
      werd to yo motha, muh nizzle.
    2. Re:Simmer down by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 1

      If the Supreme Court refuses the hear it, it will have the effect of letting the decision stand. This would go against what they have said about the pledge in the past, so I would expect for them to decide to hear it.

      --
      Forget the whales - save the babies.
    3. Re:Simmer down by Torgo's+Pizza · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, they would have to hear it in order to overturn the ruling. If they refused to hear the appeal, the ruling by the Ninth Circuit would stand. Meaning children in the states that the Ninth Circuit oversees would be prohibited saying the pledge in school. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.

    4. Re:Simmer down by Zeinfeld · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Before the comments start to get out of hand, I'd like to point out that this will almost certainly be overturned by the Supreme Court. The Ninth Circuit has pulled this stunt many a time before, only to have it overturned or reverse itself later.

      I don't see how that is so certain. In the first place the current supreme court has rulled several times against school prayer.

      The principal objection raised by the government was that the courts should not be concerned with trivial infractions. It would be very hard for the Supreme Court to claim that a case was important enough to consider and then rule that it was too insignificant to bother with.

      The rest of the world finds the fetish the US makes over its flag somewhat peculiar. The scenes of schoolchildren making loyalty oaths to the flag every day remind Europeans such as myself more of the types of society that Stalin and Hitler tried to impose than the values of liberal democracy.

      Finally the main objection to the pledge historically has been from religious groups, in particular the Quakers. For us the pledge of allegiance to a physical object is tantamount to idol worship which we have rather strong view against. Furthermore we don't make oaths by heaven for that is of God, nor by earth as that is his footstool.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    5. Re:Simmer down by The+Cat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Godwin wins again.

      I mean, doesn't this article just *scream* Godwin's law?

    6. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn right. Imagine the freaking nerve of the Court not upholding the absolute truth of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ being the only begotten son of God and path to salvation.

    7. Re:Simmer down by mkoenecke · · Score: 1

      Funny thing: I'm a lawyer, and I believe the exact opposite. I don't see a problem with having citizens pledge allegiance to the flag and to the republic for which it stands. In fact, the grounds on which that (requiring the Pledge in schools) was ruled unconstitutional were religious: some sects refuse to pledge allegiance to anything but the Big Guy. Other than that, I say to heck with 'em: if it makes them uncomfortable to keep their traps shut while others are pledging allegiance to their flag and republic, they deserve feeling that way.

      'Course, I'm pretty big on the Constitution and our political system -- which doesn't mean I'm all that thrilled with some of the components thereof and how things are run.

      But in terms of Constitutionality, I have always seen a problem with the "under God" addition. And I'm a pretty committed theist, too.

      --
      TANSTAAFL
    8. Re:Simmer down by Torgo's+Pizza · · Score: 1
      In the past, SCotUS has ruled that schools can require teachers to lead the pledge but ruled students cannot be punished for refusing to recite it. Other cases involving phrases and mottos pertaining to God have stood up in other Federal Courts. The recent case of Ohio's state motto "With God, all things are possible" have been held to be constitutional and not an endorsement of Christianity despite quoting Jesus.

      Ari Fleischer, White House spokeman stated, "The Supreme Court itself begins each of its sessions with the phrase `God save the United States and this honorable court. The Declaration of Independence refers to God or to the Creator four different times. Congress begins each session of the Congress each day with a prayer, and of course our currency says, `In God We Trust. The view of the White House is that this was a wrong decision and the Department Justice is now evaluating how to seek redress."

      My gut feeling with the current makeup of SCotUS, they'll quickly overturn it and refer back to their earlier decision on the matter; letting those who disagree with the pledge with the option of not saying it.

    9. Re:Simmer down by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      I really caught hell in high school for refusing to stand up for the pledge. Nationalism sucks big time, flags are stupid, and by the time I was in high school, it was fun to taunt the teacher into forcing me to stand up (he never did), but for a little kid in school, it is very different. Coercion works very will with little trusting kids. I'm glad they court made its decision.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    10. Re:Simmer down by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2
      The rest of the world finds the fetish the US makes over its flag somewhat peculiar.

      It is somewhat peculiar, but it or something like it was probably inevitable. Culturally, the US is much more diverse than any single European nation, although just possibly not much more than the EU taken as a whole. Since we do not share a single culture, culture alone cannot be a unifying principle. The flag is one of the more important symbols that have come to be a substitute for it.

      Finally the main objection to the pledge historically has been from religious groups, in particular the Quakers. For us the pledge of allegiance to a physical object is tantamount to idol worship which we have rather strong view against. Furthermore we don't make oaths by heaven for that is of God, nor by earth as that is his footstool.

      That's nice, and scriptural, but you need to explain more to avoid the impression that these objections are irrelevant. The meaning of "pledge" is on the same level roughly as promise; it doesn't quite rise to the status of an oath. Even if it did it's not being made "by" either heaven or earth, nor even God. God is mentioned as an attribute of the nation, "under God", not called upon as witness.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    11. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the ninth circuit court needs to be amended. No more of this rubbish.

    12. Re:Simmer down by j7953 · · Score: 2
      The rest of the world finds the fetish the US makes over its flag somewhat peculiar. The scenes of schoolchildren making loyalty oaths to the flag every day remind Europeans such as myself more of the types of society that Stalin and Hitler tried to impose than the values of liberal democracy.

      I am European as well, and, just like you, I was somewhat surprised to see the students pledge alliance to the flag every day when I visited the US (during a student exchange program).

      What I didn't understand and that time is that for us Europeans the word "patriot" has a different meaning than it has in the US -- in the US, a patriot is fighting for what his country stands for (i.e. liberty and justice for all), not fighting for his government no matter what the government is doing.

      I found this quote from Thomas Jefferson very interesting:

      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

      In this quote, the tyrants are obviously those who seek to destroy the "tree of liberty." What you have to realize is that Jefferson was not talking about you fighting against patriots and tyrants, but patriots fighting against tyrants. Obviously, the patriots must be the good guys then, i.e. those who are defending their liberties.

      Of course, the Jefferson quote is from 1787, and looking at the Bush administration's propanganda, I suppose the meaning might have changed since then.

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
    13. Re:Simmer down by jgalun · · Score: 1

      The rest of the world finds the fetish the US makes over its flag somewhat peculiar. The scenes of schoolchildren making loyalty oaths to the flag every day remind Europeans such as myself more of the types of society that Stalin and Hitler tried to impose than the values of liberal democracy.

      On the one hand, I agree with you that the US does have what may be an immature or peculiar fetish with patriotism, loyalty, etc. But on the other hand, I think one of the advantages the US has had during the past 100 years over Europe is its ability to walk the middle ground between the feelings of the elites and the feelings of the masses. Europe has seemingly swayed between the two - communism and fascim as the expression of the masses, which is responded to by a stifling rule of the liberal elites who fear any display of patriotism, religion, nationalism, etc. So you get fascism followed by a refusal to allow any political party to seriously disagree with the EU. I think America's middle ground is safer - elite protection against too much populist sentiment, but also letting populist sentiment like the pledge of allegiance stand too.

    14. Re:Simmer down by Nept · · Score: 1

      The above poster is a Nazi.

      --
      "Teachers leave us kids alone ..." - Roger Waters, Pink Floyd
    15. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then don't say it. Every school I've gone to allowed me to forgo the pledge. I can fully understand people not wanting to say it, disliking the wording, or to avoid being ostracized because they do not. But it's also a strange thing to force others away from this.

      re the flag worship notion--interestingly, the US has yet to give rise to a domestic demagogue who also has power. Our system of government is that which prevents extremicists from coming to power or, if they do, from retaining that power absolutely. Not whether we do or do not allow an oath of allegiance.

    16. Re:Simmer down by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Sadly, most americans don't understand that anymore either. And the government sure doesn't encourage such understanding.

      That's what patriot used to mean in the US. It's been a number of years since I've heard it used in that way. It seems that each year more of the people feel disenfranchised, whether they are in any literal sense or not. (It doesn't make too much different whether you are allowed to vote or not when the candidates are bought and sold by the large campaign donors.) The last time I voted for a candidate that I though was a good choice was the year that I voted for Pat Paulson. The rest of the time I've either been glad that the person I voted for had no chance of winning, or I've tried to guess which was the lesser of two vile evils.

      I hate and despise Bush. And I'm still not sure that Gore would have been any better. Nader would have been better, but only because he would be deadlocked with Congress all the time. A government that did nothing new would be preferable to the one that we have ended up with.

      Most of this entire mess traces back to when a Judge ruled that corporations were people. They aren't. It's clear that they aren't. But that blighted decision has been allowed to stand since the Southern Pacific got it made in their favor. (Mid to late 1800's, don't remember precisely.)
      There have been lots of decisions made that reinforce it, like the FCC decision that the broadcasters didn't need to supply free time to public political debates, but that's the one that's at the root of most of the current troubles. Rip it out, and... well, it's hard to say. The reinforcements may now be strong enough to stand on their own, though they wouldn't have been a decade ago.

      A patriot should be someone fighting for what his country stands for. Unfortunately, these days you can't do that as a part of the military. The military fights for what the government stands for, and that diverges wildly from the principles of the founders. (Except, perhaps, for those of Hamilton and his followers. He wanted a monarchy.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    17. Re:Simmer down by antientropic · · Score: 1

      I mean, doesn't this article just *scream* Godwin's law?

      No, it's a statement of fact. To many Europeans, an oath of allegiance does conjure up images of Nazi Germany and the Hitler Jugend in particular. Let's face it, this sort of thing (as far as I know) happens nowhere else in the free world.

    18. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Culturally, the US is much more diverse than any single European nation, although just possibly not much more than the EU taken as a whole

      Yeah, right. Clearly you've never been to Europe.

      Since we do not share a single culture, culture alone cannot be a unifying principle

      Then perhaps the US is no longer valid as a country.

    19. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The rest of the world finds the fetish the US makes over its flag somewhat peculiar.

      The rest of the world also finds it damned annoying that the U.S. doesn't give a flying fuck what the rest of the world thinks of us.

    20. Re:Simmer down by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      Does Godwin's Law apply on web forum discussions? I thought that it was an observation of USENET -- are web forums a proper extension?

    21. Re:Simmer down by AnalogBoy · · Score: 2

      I think my favorite quote is "those that would sacrifice essential liberty for temporary security deserve neither liberty nor security" -- Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), Letter to Josiah Quincy, Sept. 11, 1773.

      The date is appropriate too.

    22. Re:Simmer down by Matthew+Weigel · · Score: 2
      but you need to explain more to avoid the impression that these objections are irrelevant.

      First, there is the implication that God smiles upon the U.S. first and/or most. Second, there is the presence of the exact same sort of empty ritual present in religious worship.

      But you say:

      The flag is one of the more important symbols that have come to be a substitute for it.

      And that isn't idol worship?

      The meaning of "pledge" is on the same level roughly as promise; it doesn't quite rise to the status of an oath.

      And what is the difference between them? Is one, or the other, less true, less wholly felt, or said such that God sees what you say less?

      To someone who sees speaking the Truth at all times a holy leading, there is no difference between speaking, promising, and making an oath or pledge, except that all of the latter tend to depend upon external forces (Heaven, God, or something on earth), at which point it is inappropriate.

      The only belief I think I should be expected to profess, in any circumstance, is my belief in God. I will gladly fail any expectation put upon me to profess belief in how wonderful, important, holy, or correct the United States are.

      --
      --Matthew
    23. Re:Simmer down by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      I think my favorite quote is "those that would sacrifice essential liberty for temporary security deserve neither liberty nor security" -- Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), Letter to Josiah Quincy, Sept. 11, 1773.

      How about Edmund Burke's coment of roughly the same era to the effect that 'it is astonishing how much noise a collection of slave owners can make about liberty'.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    24. Re:Simmer down by AnalogBoy · · Score: 1

      OOOOOer, i like that one.

      Applies to some:

      It is unbecoming for young men to utter maxims. Aristotle.

    25. Re:Simmer down by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      Someone correct me if I'm wrong.

      This is Slashdot. There's no need to ask.

    26. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Imagine the freaking nerve of the Court not upholding the absolute truth of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ

      With "imagine" being the key word.

    27. Re:Simmer down by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Does Godwin's Law apply on web forum discussions? I thought that it was an observation of USENET -- are web forums a proper extension?

      The ironic thing about Godwin's law is that Godwin himself is pretty notorious for starting and stoking petty flame wars on mailing lists. Basically he has a difficulty understanding that trial lawyer logic does not work too well in a context where the person being harassed has equal speaking rights.

      That said, Godwin himself has admitted that in some cases comparison to Nazis is actually justified.

      In Europe one of the canonical images of Facism is the picture of a teen age aryan boy saluting the Nazi flag one of Lenni Rehsenfal's images from Triumph of the Will. The canonical image of communism were the May day parades and the pictures of school children holding up placards to make pictures of Mao and Stalin.

      We associate the saluting of flags with the military and the militarization of civilian life with totalitarianism.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    28. Re:Simmer down by texchanchan · · Score: 2
      Re What I didn't understand and that time is that for us Europeans the word "patriot" has a different meaning than it has in the US

      Exactly. Two points:
      • We (Americans) have nothing in common besides being here. No common ethnicity, language, religion, political ideas, etc. The only thing we have in common is citizenship and sometimes not even that. Kind of like Slashdotters.
      • The citizens (or subjects) of other countries expect to be defined by their nationality. Americans expect their nation to be defined by them.
      I saw a talk by a non-American, come to denounce us for our sins, who berated us for flying that militaristic symbol, the flag, over everything from our front yards to car dealerships. She did not understand that we don't see the thing as military at all. Goodness no. It's just plain old not a military symbol. If anything, it brings to mind schools. The icon for a school on American maps is a tiny flag like a squared-off P.

      Possibly the flag of her country is used strictly in a military context. But we have NO OTHER THING in common. So we use the flag as a unifying symbol. It just means "us", not "us and our politics" because we don't agree on politics; not "us and our religion" because we don't agree on religion; not "us and our government" because at any given time half or more of the country doesn't like the current administration. It really does symbolize the people and their ideals.

      (The flag has been misused of course, but so has every symbol in the world, and they can't be judged by their abusers.)
    29. Re:Simmer down by efernalReal · · Score: 1

      If the Supreme Court rejects the hearing of appeal then in essence it is allowing the 9th Circuit's ruling to stand. This would mean that the words "under God" in the Pledge are indeed unconstituional and therefore not required to be spoken by children NATIONWIDE. You cannot have a Federal law that is constitutional in some states and unconstitutional in other states. Equal protection and full faith clause.

    30. Re:Simmer down by farfolen · · Score: 1

      forgive me. i assumed that the school district would appeal to have the entire appellate court rule on the decision. i believe it's within their rights to do so. if they do that, the decision would most likely be overturned. then there wouldn't be a prob with the supreme's refusing to hear it. i apologize, as i didn't say this in my previous post.

      --
      werd to yo motha, muh nizzle.
    31. Re:Simmer down by praktike · · Score: 1

      no, just the "under god" part. and btw, the supreme court has enough bible-bangers to reverse it for sure.

      --
      -------- -praktike
    32. Re:Simmer down by the_truk_stop · · Score: 1

      I can't particularly speak knowledgably on the subject, as I am just now 18 years old, and have not served in our country's military. Rather, I speak from my personal beliefs ("oh no, he said 'beliefs'!)

      > the fetish the US makes over its flag

      I seems to me that it is not so much a fetish with our flag, but rather a way to instill something of value and familiarity in our people. When the WTC towers were destroyed, what popped out onto all of our cars' antennas? The American flag! Why? Because it is an easily recognizable symbol of a number of things: unity (we take care of our own and avenge those who died), strength (when everyone pulls out a flag it's like displaying gang colors [sorry to refer to us all as a 'gang']), and determination (we defeated the British when the need arose, and against all odds; we'll take you down too). The flag is not some sort of toy to have a fetish about: it's a rallying point that we can gather around.

      -- Truk

    33. Re:Simmer down by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2
      First, there is the implication that God smiles upon the U.S. first and/or most. Second, there is the presence of the exact same sort of empty ritual present in religious worship.

      First, there's no such implication. (I see no reason to support this further; it seems fair to counter your bald assertion with one of my own. Besides, it seems clear enough -- to me, anyway -- from a plain reading of the text.) Second, you need to clarify which religious ritual you're talking about. The rituals of my religion are anything but empty.

      And no, a symbol that substitutes for cultural unity isn't an idol. There. You asked a question and I answered. If you meant to imply that such a symbol is an idol, you'll once again have to provide something other than bald assertion.

      And what is the difference between them? Is one, or the other, less true, less wholly felt, or said such that God sees what you say less?

      Yes, actually. God sees all no matter what we do, but men for their part seem to take vows more seriously when they invoke him as a witness, in general. If you're an exception to that generality, then good for you.

      And you're incorrect about pledges. As a verb it means to make a promise or agreement. Although it can be enforced by the exchange of a valuable token of some kind, that's not a necessary condition of one, and in any event does not involve calling upon any higher power. An oath is sealed by calling upon some external force at witness. Someone who feels he is commanded by God to always speak the truth (this is what I take your idiosyncratic phrase "holy leading" to mean) and concomitantly forbidden to make oaths ought to be able to offer a pledge with a clear conscience. I'd think that if that pledge takes note of God's omnipotence -- aren't we all "under God" no matter where we live? -- without actually calling upon him as witness, so much the better.

      It's interesting that with all this you feel no loyalty to the country that does not interfere with your freedom practise your religion, to the point where the Constitution even allows for affirmations where it otherwise calls for oaths so that persons of your persuasion need not violate their beliefs in order to take a public duty upon themselves. At the very least, some might perceive you as ungrateful.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    34. Re:Simmer down by zensmile · · Score: 1
      The rest of the world finds the fetish the US makes over its flag somewhat peculiar.


      That isn't entirely true. I was in Thailand and bought a pair of running shorts. I also had a Thai flag sewn on the leg...I guess that it was because I really liked Thailand and felt compelled to wear their flag while I was there.


      The lady would not sew it on. She said it was disrespectful to sew the flag on below the waist. I find it very odd that Americans don't have that same kind of respect for our flag. We shit on it, wear it as a diaper, use it for firestarter, etc.


      I admire people that try to hold on to respect for one's country and symbols of that union.

    35. Re:Simmer down by mpe · · Score: 2

      It is somewhat peculiar, but it or something like it was probably inevitable. Culturally, the US is much more diverse than any single European nation

      Not exactly, in some ways, notably political parties the US is considerably less diverse than many European countries.

      although just possibly not much more than the EU taken as a whole. Since we do not share a single culture, culture alone cannot be a unifying principle.

      Many European countries have cultural variations, even small countries such as Belgium.

    36. Re:Simmer down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I didn't understand and that time is that for us Europeans the word "patriot" has a different meaning than it has in the US -- in the US, a patriot is fighting for what his country stands for (i.e. liberty and justice for all), not fighting for his government no matter what the government is doing.

      Does the latter meaning hold much sway in the US right now? If it did where is all the rioting?

    37. Re:Simmer down by mpe · · Score: 2

      It seems that each year more of the people feel disenfranchised, whether they are in any literal sense or not. (It doesn't make too much different whether you are allowed to vote or not when the candidates are bought and sold by the large campaign donors.)

      Or where there are few candidates. Many people in Europe have also been showing dissatisfaction with established political parties. For some reason it appears to be a lot easier get a new political party elected in European countries than in the US. Possibly because of different rules on campaign funding and access to the media.Would something like the recent Dutch general election even be possible in the US?

      I hate and despise Bush. And I'm still not sure that Gore would have been any better.

      Quite likely this is why many Americans don't even bother to register to vote.

      Nader would have been better, but only because he would be deadlocked with Congress all the time. A government that did nothing new would be preferable to the one that we have ended up with.

      Does anyone not Republican or Democrat seriously stand a chance of being elected as US president? Effectivly the US media ignores "third party" candidates.

      Most of this entire mess traces back to when a Judge ruled that corporations were people. They aren't. It's clear that they aren't.

      Not only that corporations arn't treated as people, especially when they break the law. There is no such thing as a jail for corporations, a corporation can be on trial whilst conducting "business as usual". Giving corporations the same rights as real people effectivly turns them into something superior.

    38. Re:Simmer down by Matthew+Weigel · · Score: 2
      First, there's no such implication. (I see no reason to support this further; it seems fair to counter your bald assertion with one of my own. Besides, it seems clear enough -- to me, anyway -- from a plain reading of the text.)

      I think there's more to it, particularly accounting for the development that went into it, but I'll give you the point.

      Second, you need to clarify which religious ritual you're talking about. The rituals of my religion are anything but empty.

      I'm sorry, I should not have said that.

      But the fact remains that it is a ritual, glorifying someone or something other than God. I think that's idol worship, and I hope you can see that it inhibits my free practice of religion to be asked to do it.

      There. You asked a question and I answered.

      Good. All my questions do request answers. It might be that your answer illuminates a point that makes you change your mind, it might be that your answer illuminates a point that makes me change my mind, or it might just give me the information I need to continue trying to make my point.

      Yes, actually. God sees all no matter what we do, but men for their part seem to take vows more seriously when they invoke him as a witness, in general.

      I take your 'yes' to mean that it is less wholly felt, rather than intrinsically less true or less seen by God. In which case you are arguing that giving the pledge is important because it doesn't mean as much. See below.

      If you're an exception to that generality, then good for you.

      Ah! Now it's a generality, that some people might except. Does your claim, that a pledge is less than an oath, and does not interfere with the religious freedom of people who will not take oaths, still stand? My impression is that it does not.

      And you're incorrect about pledges.

      I am? It doesn't mean to make a promise? It doesn't interfere with someone's interest in speaking only the Truth? I can make a pledge, and go back on it, without having lied?

      As a verb it means to make a promise or agreement.

      Ah, no, I wasn't wrong. So a reasonable person that might be willing to admit that a better country might come along, and might be willing to ditch one imperfect country for another less imperfect country, would be lying if they took the pledge. OK.

      and in any event does not involve calling upon any higher power.

      Point taken. I'm afraid I didn't make both of my points clear before, that it could fail as a statement of Truth, and (erroneously) that it calls upon the power of God.

      It's interesting that with all this you feel no loyalty to the country that does not interfere with your freedom practise your religion, to the point where the Constitution even allows for affirmations where it otherwise calls for oaths so that persons of your persuasion need not violate their beliefs in order to take a public duty upon themselves. At the very least, some might perceive you as ungrateful.

      I'm sorry if you disapprove of my beliefs. But I think you misunderstand. How can I be loyal to a fiction? I am grateful to the people who, accepting the fiction, operating with their understanding of the ideals that other people created the fiction with, respect my resolve to practice my religion.

      The people who respect my resolve to practice my religion are, in that respect, good people. Don't you agree that if they did not respect it, the blame would not fall to the nation's feet, but theirs? Why should I place blame upon one's actions at his feet, but praise for his actions at another's feet?

      It's interesting that you discuss my loyalty, but defend and support offering up a promise that you don't expect people to completely support. Isn't just withholding my pledge the same as offering up a pledge I won't necessarily uphold?

      --
      --Matthew
  9. Whats so hard to understand? by damu · · Score: 1

    about the seperation of church and state?

    dam(U)

    --


    Useless sig.
    1. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by fscking_coward_2001 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I believe the US constitution *does not* say anything about "separation of Church and State", but does say that the State will not establish a religion. If you think about it, these are two different concepts, albeit closely related.

    2. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well, it's not in the Constitution, it isn't how this country was set up (there were established State churches until 1833, and the US was an officially Christian nation until the late 1940s) The whole concept of this republic is that we had no king but Jesus, so that ultimate sovereignty didn't rest with men, so that we could have a limited government.

      Under God is just a statement of our political relation to God.

      It doesn't mean that the citizenry are going to be forced to go to a particular establishment of religion, like the Southern Baptists or the Unitarians.

    3. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exactly. The proper solution is to remove the state from the schools.

    4. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by numbuscus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There never has been, nor will there ever be, a decent seperation of church and state. If you think about it, how many different tax breaks are given to churches and religious organizations? These were set up to help churches spread their word. It has only been in the last century that other eastern and middle eastern religions started to prosper in the US. I wonder how hard it is for these groups to be declared tax-free religions? Personally, I wish they would seperate religion from government more. I don't think it's going to happen soon or quickly though.

    5. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think we all understand it. Some people just don't want it. They say these references to God are to trivial to matter, then they refuse to remove them.

    6. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      Here is an excerpt from the First Amendment:

      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; ..."

      The law passed in 1954 adding "Under God" to the pledge was blatantly illegal.

      btw..."separation of Church and State" and the state not establishing a religion are the same idea expressed with different words. By making no law respecting an establishment of religion, the end result is a separation of church and state.

    7. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by quasi_steller · · Score: 1

      This is indeed true. There is no such clause in the constitution. The phrase "Under God" is not unconstitutional. This phrase does not break the constitutional requirement that a (single) national religion should not be established. In fact, the phrase doesn't even support one single religion. The phrase "Under God" can mean whatever you want it too. It doesn't have to mean the Judeo/Christian God if you don't want it too. It can mean Allah, or whatever other gods there are out there.

      One can even interpret it to mean the "god" of science if you are an atheist that believes in evolution (this of course sounds strange for an atheist but if one considers that according to modern evolution, we were created by natural processes, then the god of science would be nature.)

      --
      ...interesting if true.
    8. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by mkoenecke · · Score: 1

      Regarding how hard it is for Non-Christian religions to get 501(c)(3) status: precisely as hard as it is for any other church.

      And with regard to the periodic whining about tax exemptions for religious institutions: either advocate abolishing non-profit organization exemptions entirely (e.g., the U.S Olympic Committee, the Red Cross, the ACLU, ad nauseum) or shut the heck up.

      --
      TANSTAAFL
    9. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no seperation of church and state.

      There is a seperatation of church from state.

      The difference is important.

      This means the state can't have an official state religion, not that the state can't acknowledge the existance of God.

    10. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by quasi_steller · · Score: 1

      Separation of church and state is NOT synonymous with the first amendment. This is especially true when citizens are not guaranteed their first amendment right of freely exercising their religion in school. Many schools have claimed that for children to pray in school (or otherwise exercise their right of religion as stated in the constitution) breaks the "Separation of Church and State" clause, which doesn't exist!

      Fortunately for many kids, the supreme court ruled that children do indeed have this right despite what the principal says. Of course this didn't happen without a fight from the ACLU.

      --
      ...interesting if true.
    11. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just how high are you?

    12. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      One can even interpret it to mean the "god" of science if you...

      ... are desparately looking for some way to simultaneously (a) keep "under God"; (b) include atheists; and (c) make it look like you're not violatng the First Amendment.


      Nonetheless, you are.

    13. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So move.
      Quit whining like a little bitch and move to a country that wasn't founded with any "god" in mind.

      kthx

    14. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by cfish · · Score: 1

      Yes, the Church of Satan in SF was said to have established because the guy wanted to take advantage of these church tax break rules.

    15. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't worship science as a god.

    16. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      'Here is an excerpt from the First Amendment:

      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; ..."

      The law passed in 1954 adding "Under God" to the pledge was blatantly illegal.'

      Your conclusion is NOT TRUE because adding those two words neither:
      1. respects an establishment of religion, nor
      2. prohibits the free exercize thereof

      Nice try though; better luck next time.
    17. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Actually, the right to tax an institution is the right to destroy it as the ability to levy a tax implies the ability to levy a punitive tax. As government is not constitutionally permitted to destroy churches (1st amendment, free exercise clause), churches must be tax exempt in their religious affairs operations.

      As for qualifying for tax exempt status, every church has the same rules they have to comply. If anything, religious favoritism has been on a political speech basis with left-wing churches getting away with a lot more than right-wing churches.

    18. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Jardine · · Score: 1

      Of course they have the right to pray, as long as it's not while they're supposed to be learning.

      Muslims have to pray towards Mecca a few times per day (I forget the exact number). They don't interrupt class to do it. There's recess (or between classes in high school) and lunch breaks for that.

      If a kid wants to pray to their god, gods, sacred beans shaped like "The Leader", they can do that all they want, as long as they do it on their own time and don't bother the other kids.

      Except for sacred beans shaped like "The Leader". We must all bow down and worship the Leader.

    19. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Peyna · · Score: 2

      I always understood "no law respecting an establishment of religion" to mean laws that affect religious institutions. "establishment" meaning the Catholic Church, or some other religious institution. Not meaning the establishment of a national religion. Of course, that is included in my interpretation as well.

      --
      What?
    20. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      This is indeed true. There is no such clause in the constitution.

      Just like the phrases "original sin" and "trinity" don't exist in the christian bible. But then that doesn't stop christians from using them to describe cornerstones of their faith, does it?

      The Constitution does state that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof". What does this mean? Well, the US Supreme court used the words "separation of church and state" to put this concept into simple to understand words. Incorporating notions of theism and monism into the pledge clearly shows an endorsement of these concepts over others. That is why it is unconstitutional.

      The nonexistance of the phrase "separation of church and state" in the Constitution is not only not insightful , it's not even relevant. It is however a quite misleading.

    21. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's so hard to understand about the phrase "seperation of church and state" not ever appearing once in the consitution?

    22. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      This is especially true when citizens are not guaranteed their first amendment right of freely exercising their religion in school.

      What? Where in the constitution does it guarantee the right to freely exercise religion in school? BTW, you are aware that children do not have the same constitutionally protected rights as adults right? Especially children in state schools...

      Many schools have claimed that for children to pray in school (or otherwise exercise their right of religion as stated in the constitution) breaks the "Separation of Church and State" clause, which doesn't exist!

      The "Separation of Church and State" clause generally refers to the First Ammendment of the constitution which states Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." While it does not use the specific words "separation of church and state", it does in fact express that concept. This has been explicitly stated several times by the US Supreme court in Reynolds v. United States (1878) and Everson v. Board of Education (1947). It has also been further expounded upon by the Supreme Court in Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) and Lynch v. Donnelly (1984).

      It's very common for the "christian right" to try to use the same fallacious argument as you have to decieve people into thinking that there is no such thing as a separation of church and state, even though such fraudulent claims fly in the face of common sense and over 120 years of legal history. If it's such a big deal for your kids to be able to have an official group prayer 3 times a day, send them to a private christian school.

    23. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by symbolic · · Score: 2

      I personally think this is a clever little semantic trick created by the religionists on the right.

      The state, however, cannot promote or affirm the existence of God, as it does in the pledge.

    24. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      "Separation of church and state is NOT synonymous with the first amendment. This is especially true when citizens are not guaranteed their first amendment right of freely exercising their religion in school."

      Yes it is synonymous. What you're citing as an example is an unfortunate situation of some dimwitted educators misconstruing the separation of church and state to mean that children aren't allowed to express their religious beliefs or pray in school. That is not the case. It is OK for children to pray in school. What is not OK is a teacher leading a prayer session.

    25. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by numbuscus · · Score: 1

      What is a left-wing church? What is a right-wing church? And what constitutes being 'a church'? I know of some so-called druids in Oregon who weren't given church status. And what about GW Bush and his Wicca stance:

      "I don't think that witchcraft is a religion. I wish the military would rethink this decision." -- George W. Bush to ABCNEWS, June, 1999

      I'm not advocating any religion, nor am I suggesting that religious organizations should be taxed when other non-profit organizations aren't, I just believe the easiest and most equitable way to keep the government 'honest' when dealing with religious matters is to keep Satan, God, Allah, Jesus, Buddha, and all other religious symbols out of government and government policies.

    26. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the "prohibiting the free exercise thereof;..." part of the amendment.

      Basically, the amendment says (a) you cannot have laws establish a state-sanctioned religion (whether based on an exisiting religion or made up) and (b) you cannot have laws that impede the free exercise of one's religion.

      Examples -

      From (a): The 1954 "Under God" edit to the pledge of allegiance.

      From (b): A law that outlaws going to church or temple.

    27. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by numbuscus · · Score: 1

      Regarding how hard it is for Non-Christian religions to get 501(c)(3) status: precisely as hard as it is for any other church.

      Define 'church' for me.

      And with regard to the periodic whining about tax exemptions for religious institutions: either advocate abolishing non-profit organization exemptions entirely (e.g., the U.S Olympic Committee, the Red Cross, the ACLU, ad nauseum) or shut the heck up.

      Sounds like you are against free speech too.

    28. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by numbuscus · · Score: 1

      For those who are interested, I just ran across this page that outlines rules churches are suppose to follow regarding political activity. I thought it was interesting.

    29. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by fscking_coward_2001 · · Score: 1

      btw..."separation of Church and State" and the state not establishing a religion are the same idea expressed with different words. By making no law respecting an establishment of religion, the end result is a separation of church and state.

      If they are the same idea expressed in different words, why does doing one result in the other? That's saying "cause == effect".

    30. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by fscking_coward_2001 · · Score: 1

      Of course this didn't happen without a fight from the ACLU.

      Thanks for not making it through the post without a derogatory comment about the ACLU. Now someone's free to reference Hitler.

    31. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Where in the constitution does it guarantee the right to freely exercise religion in school?"

      How about
      "Congress shall make no law ... or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; ..." ?

    32. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by fscking_coward_2001 · · Score: 1

      What I'm trying to say about "separation of Church and State" versus "make no laws respecting the establishment of a religion" is that, to me, one has to do with how narrowly secular a government is, while the other regards how the government reacts to religion around it. The first concept is internal; the second is external.

      That said, I do agree that adding "Under God" to the pledge was not correct. The pledge was just fine - and constitutional - as an oath of patriotic allegience before it was altered.

      There are many in the United States who believe that, because the majority of the population is marginally Christian, others who are not Christian should be silent when asked to pray or otherwise endorse beliefs that are not of their religion. They want to return the nation to times when - they belive - things were right, when "Christian values" were the law of the land.

      I believe that good is good, whether that good is practiced by an animist or a Baptist. In the same vein, shouldn't what matters be that one pledges allegiance to one's country - regardless of whther one invokes the name of a higher power as part of the pledge? And the "God is on *my* country's side" thing has been over-used anyway.

    33. Re:Whats so hard to understand? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      What constitutes a church is in the tax code, I think 501(b)7 is the correct section but it's been awhile since I read USC 501 (about 10 years). The application is made and provisionally granted for 5 years if you do it right and then they review it at the end of the term to see whether you've gone nuts or you are acting consistent with your tax status.

      Any taxation of churches would lead to the ability of a disfavored religion being shut down by punitive (100%+) taxation. That's been ruled unconstitutional and the reason that *any* of the nonprofits are exempt.

  10. why is this on slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, really. I would hardly call this news for nerds. And, although it matters, it's much more appropriate for a law related site.

    1. Re:why is this on slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fine, then don't read it. besides, didn't you get the memo: this is news for LIBERTARIAN FUCKWITS now. nerds are passe.

    2. Re:why is this on slashdot? by The_THOMAS · · Score: 1

      Because nerds tend to be intelligent enough to realize there is no santa or at the very least, including a pledge to santa within a pledge to Country is contrary to the reason one would pledge to this Country.

      Duh!

      --
      Ya Sure! You Betcha!, The_THOMAS
    3. Re:why is this on slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, good point. And by "good" I mean "bad".

      On a website very often concerned with constitutional rights and freedom, etc., this is of interest to a large number of Slashdotters.

      Obviously since /. was flooded with submissions about this article, this idea is further confirmed.

      Get over it.

    4. Re:why is this on slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go watch Fox News...I'm sure you will enjoy their fair and balanced programs.

  11. As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    Millions of American schoolchildren --- including almost all adults who grew up in the US --- have for two generations recited a daily pledge of allegiance in schools. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals today ruled that pledge to be a violation of the US Constitution. Social conservatives are outraged, liberals are smirking, and many of us are just stunned.

    Background on the Pledge of Allegiance

    I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America

    And to the republic for which it stands

    one nation, indivisible,

    with liberty and justice for all

    The Pledge of Allegiance was written by a Christian Socialist activist in 1892. Heavily promoted by the magazine The Youth's Companion, at the time one of the largest weekly magazines in the United States (it was eventually merged into the magazine American Boy, which was owned by the Atlantic Monthly), which was also involved in a movement to place American flags over every schoolhouse in the country. By 1905, a majority of the non-southern states had passed laws requiring schools to fly the flag, and it was already customary at that time to require students to recite the pledge daily. Eventually, most states passed laws requiring the daily recitation of the pledge of allegiance. (In some states, students are also required to sing the national anthem).

    The wording of the pledge was codified into US law by Congress in 1942; in 1954, the wording of the pledge was changed by Congress, which added the phrase 'under God', making the line 'one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all." This modified phrasing was adopted by schools across the country, and has remained intact to this day.

    Background on the case

    Michael Newdow, an atheist living in the state of California, sued the state on the ground that the California Education Code requirement that each school day begin with appropriate patriotic exercises including but not limited to the giving of the pledge of allegiance, and the school district's requirement that each elementary school class recite the pledge of allegiance daily compels his daughter to "watch and listen as her state-employed teacher in her state-run school leads her classmates in a ritual proclaiming that there is a God," and therefore constituted a state establishment of religion, prohibited by the first amendment (and, by extension through the fourteenth amendment, to states and school districts, which are sub-units of the states). His petition asked the court to order the President to modify the pledge to delete the offending section.

    The decision

    The 9th circuit analyzed the law establishing the pledge of allegiance using three legal tests used in establishment cases. (The Lemon test, which has mostly fallen into disfavor but has not been explicitly repudiated, requires government conduct to have a secular purpose, neither advance nor inhibit religion, and must not foster government entanglement with religion. The "coercion test" requires that government conduct not coerce anyone to support or participate in religion or its exercise. The "endorsement test" requires that government not endorse a religion and "send a message to nonadherents that they are outsiders".). The court ruled that:

    • The inclusion of the phrase under God in the pledge is an endorsement of religious belief.
    • Reciting the pledge as it is currently codified is to swear allegiance to monotheism.
    • The pledge as currently codified fails the coercion test.
    • The inclusion of the phrase under God was *explicitly* done to promote a religious purpose, and therefore the pledge as currently codified fails the Lemon test.
    The court concluded that the 1954 act adding "under God" to the pledge of allegiance is unconstitutional, and that the school district policy requiring daily recital is as well.

    Future steps

    The decision is only binding in the area covered by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals - California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, Oregon, Alaska, and Hawaii - but would require school districts in that area to cease reciting of the Pledge of Allegiance. It is expected that the school district will appeal, in which case the decision will most likely be heard by the US Supreme Court sometime next year. A copy of the opinion is here.

    1. Re:As reported on the better site... by Stonehead · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thanks for your lengthy explanation. I'm European, and I had not ever heard of such a thing. I think I get the context a bit. To be honest, this 'pledge' sounds very conservative and a bit like an old patriotic communist system. I mean, to indoctrinate children on schools with political and religious shit like this - I'm very happy that I've never been drilled like that! One cynic note: Saddam Hussein recently made it compulsory for all Iraqi children to know his nationalist novels..

    2. Re:As reported on the better site... by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Pardon my potential ignorance, but wouldn't this simply cause the 1954 legislation to be struck down, meaning that the Pledge in its old form (i.e. without "under God") could still legally be recited? The case was challenging both (separately) the 1954 legislation and the school district's rule that it must be recited. The district's rule is only unconstitutional IF the law it references is active -- if the 1954 law is struck down, then the district's behavior is not unconstitutional.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    3. Re:As reported on the better site... by rlcarr · · Score: 1

      You are correct, as even a cursory reading of the court's opinion will show.

    4. Re:As reported on the better site... by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I suspect that if the Pledge were changed to remove "under God," this whole issue would go away, at least as far as the courts are concerned.

      Odds of that happening are within epsilon of zero. I guarantee you that the Family Values crowd is going to use this to hammer massive invasions of religious liberties down our throats, with Joe Lieberman (yes, the so-called Liberal) leading the way. Rationality and common sense can barely stand up for themselves against either nationalism or religious belief. Against both combined, they're practically criminal offenses.

    5. Re:As reported on the better site... by Chris+Parrinello · · Score: 1
      To be honest, this 'pledge' sounds very conservative and a bit like an old patriotic communist system.


      The punchline, from what I understand of the history of the addition of "under God" to the Pledge, is that it was added during the communist hysteria. Communists didn't believe in God so if we made everybody pledge "under God" then communism would go away.

    6. Re:As reported on the better site... by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 2, Funny
      Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis, shmeumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis!

      if you say it loud enough you'll always sound precanoconiosis....

    7. Re:As reported on the better site... by TGK · · Score: 2

      That sounds like an excelent "out" for the Renquist Court, which would be hesitant to rule the pledge as a whole unconstitutional.

      Though it's not outside the relm of possibility that Rhenquist could fail to get the votes needed to grant "cert" and would thus fail to overturn the lower court's ruling.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    8. Re:As reported on the better site... by Deosyne · · Score: 1

      Certainly does give the impression that the US isn't able to stand on its own merits in the eyes of its citizens, doesn't it? I've always found it disturbing that we need to teach our citizens how to appreciate their nation instead of just teaching them about it and letting them realize that its pretty cool. Whatever; I just remember hating having to stand up and play the little puppet in school, and resenting the US a little for it. The "under god" part did always stick in my craw, as well, like I was a substandard citizen for not believing it when I said it.

    9. Re:As reported on the better site... by Master+Bait · · Score: 1, Troll
      I pledge allegiance to the fag
      of the United Snakes of America
      And to the Republican
      for which it stands

      One corporation
      invisible
      under cash
      with liberty and justice
      for $ome

      Amen

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    10. Re:As reported on the better site... by Torgo's+Pizza · · Score: 1

      Actually, according to the AP article: Congress inserted "under God" at the height of the Cold War after a campaign by the Knights of Columbus, religious leaders and others who wanted to distinguish the United States from what they regarded as godless communism.

    11. Re:As reported on the better site... by Dirtside · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not sure why you call Lieberman a "so-called Liberal". Nobody calls him that -- he's more or less a religious zealot fascist. Just because he's a Democrat doesn't mean he's a liberal. I'm more or less a liberal, and used to be a Democrat, but when the Democratic National Committee declared something about glorifying God, I determined that they weren't representing my interests particularly well. I re-registered as a different party thereafter, though I won't say which, to try to keep people from making judgments about me based on my political party. :)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    12. Re:As reported on the better site... by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 2
      Uh, pardon me... Your information is somewhat inaccurate. First, the state of California does not require reciting of the pledge. It merely requires that all students acknowledge their flag. Further, you are mistaken in the following:

      Michael Newdow, an atheist living in the state of California, sued the state on the ground that the California Education Code requirement that each school day begin with appropriate patriotic exercises including but not limited to the giving of the pledge of allegiance, and the school district's requirement that each elementary school class recite the pledge of allegiance daily compels his daughter to "watch and listen as her state-employed teacher in her state-run school leads her classmates in a ritual proclaiming that there is a God," and therefore constituted a state establishment of religion, prohibited by the first amendment (and, by extension through the fourteenth amendment, to states and school districts, which are sub-units of the states). His petition asked the court to order the President to modify the pledge to delete the offending section. [emphasis mine]

      Now perhaps I am an ignorant son of a bitch, but I believe this is the First Amendment you refer to:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [emphasis mine]

      Alright, let's analyse this. Congress can't prohibit the free exercise thereof. Hmmm... Where does the first amendment prohibit people from saying the word, "God?" I don't see it in there, anywhere. In fact, it says they CAN'T stop you from saying "Under God." (In "abridging the freedom of speech," eh.) Yeah. The first amendment isn't a phonebook-sized bill of crap like most legalese written today. Back then, they wrote shit with pens and paper, so they put thought into their legalese. Unlike today, when the legislative branch files a bug report with Microsoft, stating that Word crashes when they write a 10,000 word footnote. So scratch that.

      Oh, and may I point out one more thing? The State of California, which ALLEGEDLY requires reciting of the pledge, is NOT the Congress named in the Constitution. Therefore, the Constitution does NOTHING to prevent the state of California from requiring the recitation of the pledge. Think about it.

    13. Re:As reported on the better site... by Dirtside · · Score: 2

      I'd mod you up +1 Funny if I hadn't written in this story already ;)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    14. Re:As reported on the better site... by dvdeug · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Therefore, the Constitution does NOTHING to prevent the state of California from requiring the recitation of the pledge

      Except for a minor thing called the 14th amendment, which applies the Bill of Rights to the states (in practice and intent, if not in the plain text of the law.)

    15. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regarding your Republican reference, you might notice that Democrats are some of the most willing to take your rights away for the entertainment industry. Your disgust should be directed at all corrupt politicians, of which both parties have plenty.

    16. Re:As reported on the better site... by mrmag00 · · Score: 1

      damn republicans.

    17. Re:As reported on the better site... by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      The 14th amendment sort of, kind of applies the Bill of Rights to the states. If it well and truly did that for all amendments most gun control legislation would fall by the wayside and 41 states would have their anti-private militia/anti-paramilitary statutes struck down.

      Incorporation is a tricky doctrine and I'm not sure they've got it right quite yet.

    18. Re:As reported on the better site... by medscaper · · Score: 0, Troll

      4 Insightful?!?! What the hell are you moderators thinking?

      --
      Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
    19. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ?????
      Original Post:
      and therefore constituted a state establishment of religion, prohibited by the first amendment

      Your Post:
      Now perhaps I am an ignorant son of a bitch, but I believe this is the First Amendment you refer to: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion...

      Original Post:
      (and, by extension through the fourteenth amendment, to states and school districts, which are sub-units of the states)
      Your Post:
      Oh, and may I point out one more thing? The State of California, which ALLEGEDLY requires reciting of the pledge, is NOT the Congress named in the Constitution. Therefore, the Constitution does NOTHING to prevent the state of California from requiring the recitation of the pledge. Think about it.

      This analysis leads me to the following question:
      How did someone as dumb as you learn how to use a web browser and write coherent sentences?

    20. Re:As reported on the better site... by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      who cares about the stupid 14th amendment?

    21. Re:As reported on the better site... by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 1

      I call Lieberman a "so-called Liberal" because that's what the GOP have been calling him for years. I basically agree with your analysis of the DNC, by the way.

    22. Re:As reported on the better site... by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      d000000dz!!!!!!!!!1111111 i don't no how 2 uze a www browzer!!!!!!1111 i have someone elze right my setencez 4 me!!!!!!!111111

    23. Re:As reported on the better site... by V_drive · · Score: 0, Troll

      Gee--thanks a lot for challenging the moderators to change it--now it's "5 Insightful"

      --
      char *mySig;
    24. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fucking brilliant!

    25. Re:As reported on the better site... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Er, even Ashcroft -- whom many anti-gunners would regard as an extremist, I'm sure -- acknowledges that the Second is (much like the First) subject to restrictions. The First hasn't been interpreted as absolute (speech that incites panic and disaster, for instance), and most folks don't consider the Second absolute, either.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    26. Re:As reported on the better site... by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      People who are much more intelligent and rational about public policy, and who thus prefer the rule of law over arbitrary whims of folks like yourself -- that's who. This country wasn't founded to be run by fiat.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    27. Re:As reported on the better site... by TekPolitik · · Score: 2

      Pardon my potential ignorance, but wouldn't this simply cause the 1954 legislation to be struck down, meaning that the Pledge in its old form (i.e. without "under God") could still legally be recited?

      Yes - if the mandating of the words is unconstitutional, it is the amending Act that is, and always has been, invalid. That means the original Act was never amended and the original words without that phrase are and always have been the correct form. It also means that if the California law requires teachers to lead the pledge according to the wording in the Federal law, they will not be complying unless they lead it in the form without the offending words.

      As a side note, the effect on the United States currency would be that the printing of "In God We Trust" on the currency is clearly an endorsement of religion and the legislation requiring that would also be unconstitutional. This would mean that the printing of those words on banknotes is, and always has been, unauthorised. The money's still valid, but it would be possible to compel the US Treasury to cease including those words.

    28. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a child, I always found the Pledge a little weird, but I didn't (and don't) mind it that much. It is not a serious thing. I would rather have children learn how to read than learn how to recite a few words, but what are the chances of that?

    29. Re:As reported on the better site... by Dirtside · · Score: 2
      As a side note, the effect on the United States currency would be that the printing of "In God We Trust" on the currency is clearly an endorsement of religion and the legislation requiring that would also be unconstitutional. This would mean that the printing of those words on banknotes is, and always has been, unauthorised. The money's still valid, but it would be possible to compel the US Treasury to cease including those words.
      Not quite -- this issue has not been directly addressed. I personally agree that the same logic applies in either case, but until the courts actually say so, it ain't so. Hopefully this decision will give support to the next case to challenge "In God We Trust", but even if SCOTUS upholds the 9th Court's ruling in this case, the Treasury could not be compelled to stop printing "In God We Trust", because the law mandating those words has not itself been struck down.

      Presumably. IANAL. :)

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    30. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately a case against the US Treasury would be tried in the District Court in Maryland, not in California.

    31. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is particularly ironic, since one of the events that drove the first wave of British colonials to the "New World" was the Catholic/Protestant civil wars in England and the resulting requirement of "loyalty oaths."

      I guess the theory was that it was okay to require a Pledge of Allegience to a "flag" and to "the Republic for which it stands." That's not the same as requiring a pledge to a specific sovereign. As an American, I still never liked it. I hold the superiority of a system of civil liberty "to be self-evident." If your freedom doesn't sell itself, maybe it isn;t freedom.

      I think we have a pretty good system, but like any soceity, we have teetered between liberty and authority. From the J. Edgar Hoover era to Joe McCarthy, we had some very repressive and scary times. The main reason I have hope (and still very much love the system in my country) is that we have a terribly inefficient government. I hear conservatives saying we need efficient government. I disagree. An efficient government is a repressive government. The separation of powers does a pretty good job of bringing our system back into line.

      Not that both liberal forces and conservative forces haven't messed with it. From Democrat F.D.Roosevelt attempting to pack the Supreme Court to Republican R.M.Nixon covering up a felony commited to further his reelection, we've had plenty of attempts to tilt the scales, but somehow it comes back.

      Right now, I think we are heading into a rough patch. Between the pressure of big money getting legislation passed for wealthy special interests (Hollywood, anyone?) and the understandable but lamentable reverses to liberty and privacy in the name of security following 9/11, we are going to have plenty to wrangle with in the system. That the system will bring us back to equilibrium, however, I am confident.

      I think this was a very good decision and almost clears the bad taste in my mouth from the attempts to get a flag burning amendment passed.

    32. Re:As reported on the better site... by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 2
      This country was founded to be run by the current whims of the Party, as detailed in the Constitution, also known as 1984 by George Orwell, as evidenced by the ability of huge multinational corporations to purchase whatever laws serve their convenience at the moment from the Government, a convenient content provider of such laws. Just wait a few more years, when they start installing nanoscale biotech computers in every person's cerebral cortex to monitor all their thoughts and report their GPS location along with gigabytes of data per second to enormous central distributed computers that perform constant real-time analysis and investigation, deploying police officers to shoot you if they sense that you may, at some future time, commit a crime of any magnitude. Then we'll see who's sane. Until then, I'm sticking with the Constitution of the United States, as composed by our Forefathers, not some fake immitation Constitution of some bullshit started by a bunch of liberals and other lowlives.

      Disclaimer: This post is satire.

    33. Re:As reported on the better site... by TekPolitik · · Score: 2

      the Treasury could not be compelled to stop printing "In God We Trust", because the law mandating those words has not itself been struck down.

      When a law is struck down for being unconstitutional, it was never valid. As long as it's inevitable that the result, if contested, would be that the law or directive authorising the printing of those words was invalid, it is and was invalid for all time.

      The actual decision doesn't change the validity, it merely states it. An action taken for the purpose of compelling the US Treasury to cease the use of those words would be almost certain to succeed, and would in fact be the case in which the declaration of the law would be made.

    34. Re:As reported on the better site... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Wrong emphasis. Let's try it this way:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.


      Like much of the Constitution, this is a masterpiece of balance. The establishment clause prevents the creation of a state church, or official government endorsement or imposition of specific religious views; the prohibition clause prevents laws banning certain religions or religious practices. The long, sad history of religious warfare and oppression in Europe is a solid argument that both clauses are needed.
      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    35. Re:As reported on the better site... by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      It isn't a matter of the 2nd being absolute, it's not even considered binding on the states for the most part. If it were, you could get a license to carry a handgun in Alabama and NYC would have to respect that license. People could choose to incorporate a private militia in one of the 9 states where that's legal and the other states couldn't bar them from operating as a foreign corporation.

      2nd amendment law is highly restrictive with few/no penumbras compared to 1st amendment law.

    36. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reciting the pledge as it is currently codified is to swear allegiance to monotheism.

      Bullshit. "I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the republic"..." End of list of things pledged allegiance to.

      I don't see God in that list, nor do I see "monotheism."

      There is a mention of God in the description of this "nation", and if you understood history better, you'd know that the description was precisely accurate.

    37. Re:As reported on the better site... by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      Where is the seperation of power when you have only two political parties in power, and they often have the same views on important issues related to freedom?

      The executive branch can start domestic police organizations under the guise of the department of the treasury, and then get those organizations funded through their friends in the legislative branch. Where is the seperation of power there? The executive has grossly overstepped their limits, with the support of congress under this two-party system. The only check and balance that has any effect at all is the courts.

      For examples, you only need to look as far as the war on drugs. The DEA and legislative branch and going apeshit because a majority of people in a majority of states want marijuana legal, at least for medical use. They are actively working together to crush the will of the people, and even the will of the state governments.

      There is no accountability, there is no check and no balance, just authoritarian policy making with no regard to the original limited powers the federal government was supposed to wield.

      So I ask you, how can you consider the system of checks and balances to work, when there are really no recent examples of an adversarial relationship between the executive and the legislative, when the only disagreement between the branches comes on trivial issues that don't directly have an effect our real freedoms, when a government drunk on power has only one goal, to expand that power by any means necessary.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    38. Re:As reported on the better site... by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 2

      Alright, let's analyse this. Congress can't prohibit the free exercise thereof. Hmmm... Where does the first amendment prohibit people from saying the word, "God?" I don't see it in there, anywhere. In fact, it says they CAN'T stop you from saying "Under God." (In "abridging the freedom of speech," eh.)

      Nothing in the court ruling restricts the right to say "under god".

      UNDER GOD - UNDER GOD

      See... no one is stoning me. The ruling says that the government cannot force little children to say "under god"

      Read the many articles.

      --
      There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
    39. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This case has nothing to do with people saying "under god[s]" in their free time. People are just as free to say "under god[s]" today as they were yesterday, so claiming that the case prohibits this is a red herring. Students can say "under god[s]" all they want so long as they aren't disrupting class, just like always.

      The ruling is about the legality of a government agent leading a captive audience in the recitation of an oath which singles out believers in a particular set of religious beliefs as special. In that quote from the US Constitution you provided, you'll see that the government is prohibited from passing laws which have the effect of establishing religion. That is, laws which favor one set of beliefs (here, monotheism) over other religious beliefs (for instance, polytheism) or lack of religious beliefs are unconstitutional. The pledge, by singling out the monotheists god as being the protector of the country, falls into this category.

      Here's a quick way to tell if mentions of god by government employees are likely to pass constitutional muster : replace the mention of god with "godess", "no gods", or "all of the gods". If you would honestly be happy with your children being forced to hear how the US is one nation under at least two out of several gods every day at school, then maybe you do have a reason to doubt that this court ruling is sound. If, on the other hand, you'd object to your children being forced to hear that the US is a nation under "the godesses", then you can understand why some people are happy to see this ruling. None of these examples single out a particular religion, but they are still establishments of certain religious beliefs over the religious beliefs of others.

      Oh, and you should realize that the US Constitution has changed since it was originally written a few hundred years ago. You'll probably want to look at the 14th amendment for information on why limitations which apply to Congress also apply to state and local officials. I'm not sure why you brought this up, since two paragraphs before you are upset that a government entity which is not Congress has infringed on the free exercise clause. Get it straight - either the Constitution applies only to Congress or it doesn't.

    40. Re:As reported on the better site... by Dirtside · · Score: 2
      Huh? What are you talking about? Where did I say anything that contradicts what you're saying? I was talking about the fact that if the "under God" law is struck down, that will have no direct effect on "In God We Trust" unless a separate action is brought against that law. I'm fully aware of what it means when a law is struck down.
      An action taken for the purpose of compelling the US Treasury to cease the use of those words would be almost certain to succeed
      Actually, it has -- there has been at least one challenge to "In God We Trust" in the past, that made it to SCOTUS, and was REJECTED. That's why "IGWT" is still on our money. Now, IF another action was made against "IGWT", and this time SCOTUS agreed with it, THEN we would no longer have "IGWT" on the money. But that hasn't happened yet.
      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    41. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 2

      Uh, in the Constitution, where it is specifically forbidden for the government to limit the people's right to petition the government for the redress of greivances. In Article III which allows you to petition the judiciary. In Article I which vests all legislative powers in an elected body.

      If the government is tilting away from you, you become politically active. I've started writing what I think to my congressman (James Oberstar, D-MN) and to my senators (Mark Dayton, D-MN, and Paul Wellstone, D-MN). I've decided to put my money into a special interest that works on issues I care about: The Electronic Frontier Foundation.

      It is not the responsbility of the parties to be ideologically at odds. It is your responsibility to get your ideology into a political party. The parties have been similarly mushy because people have been generally content with the status quo. Sure, we all like to complain, but nothing has really motivated the electorate to give the parties a shock. . (Well, my state has, but we've always been political freaks up here in the tundra. Our Democrats are members of a party called the DFL: the Democratic Farmer-Labor party. We elected one of the first nearly socialist governors in the Union from the Farmer-Labor party, a 3rd party movement that eventually merged with the Minnesota Democratic party. We also gave a big shock to both the R's and the D's by electing a third party governor, and former pro-wrestler. We've always been a little bit "anally progressive," which is to say strongly liberal with a bit of uptight Lutheranism thrown in.)

      I know my original post sounded complacent, but that wasn't my intent. My intent was to remind people that the system has gone out of whack in the past and the people have brought it back in line. I'm sure the people will again. So, what I really was suggesting was that people get off their dead asses, put down the game controllers, and make some noise. Write. Contribute. Go to you caucuses. Make a noise. If you keep waiting for a white knight, he might be wearing a white sheet. To paraphrase the Bard, the fault lies not in our stars, but in ourselves.

      The separation of powers is between the office and the people. The people control who gets the office. All the money in the world can't change the fact that it is the people who ultimately decide. Meet your neighbors. Discuss the issues. Persuade. Cajole. Then stop talking and vote. Have faith that people will consider your arguments when that curtain is drawn. Have faith that most people are of good conscience and want to do the right thing. Have faith, also, that if the election doesn't go your way, that wasn't the way most of us wanted to go. It's messy. It's clumsy. But it beats just about every alternative I know.

      People seem to forget that while we have more or less always been a two party system, the two parties in question are not the same today as in the past. The Republicans were an upstart and fairly radical third party. They're one of the two now. Things change. And the good thing is the only way a "white knight" with a cause can effect change is to get a whole bunch of people to go along with it. This helps protect us from that bane of history, the charismatic tyrant. We've had a few try. Some have done some serious damage. But we remain a nation of free individuals. The only power that can take that freedom away is ourselves, if we let it erode and slip away. Don't. Stop complaining and start organizing, talking, writing, petitioning, joining, contributing, building, changing the world. That's not a power government gives, it is immane. It is yours, according to Enlightenment thinking, by nature. Take it.

    42. Re:As reported on the better site... by tigycho · · Score: 1

      >Now perhaps I am an ignorant son of a bitch, but I >believe this is the First Amendment you refer to:
      > Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment > of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ; > or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the > right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the > government for a redress of grievances. [emphasis mine]

      >Alright, let's analyse this. OK. >Congress can't prohibit the free exercise thereof. Hmmm... >Where does the first amendment prohibit people from saying >the word, "God?" I don't see it in there, anywhere. True. It also means that they can't prohibit the the free NON-exercise of religion. The trouble here is that we aren't talking about a conflict with the Free Exercise Clause. We are talking about a violation of the Establishment Clause. In a publicly funded school, having the school make positive affirmations about the existence of a God, a set of Gods, or the nonexistence of them is tantamount to a govermental policy of establishing those religions, or types of religions. >In fact, it says they CAN'T stop you from saying "Under God." >(In "abridging the freedom of speech," eh.) Yeah. Doesn't matter. See above. Better yet, read the decision. >Oh, and may I point out one more thing? Please do. >The State of California, which ALLEGEDLY requires reciting of >the pledge, is NOT the Congress named in the Constitution. Yes. >Therefore, the Constitution does NOTHING to prevent the state >of California from requiring the recitation of the pledge. No. This just plain shows willful ignorance of Constitutional Law. I may not be a lawyer, but maybe you should investigate teh 14th Amendment, it that way it is generally seen to extend the reach of the Constitution's Amendments to the States and other sub-untis of government. A notion you'd be more familiar with, I suppose, if you had read the decision, rather than relying on cnn, or other posts in this forum. Not so oddly, this is covered, as well. >Think about it. I have. And I brought some appropriate tools to the exercise. Try it sometime.

    43. Re:As reported on the better site... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      My views are mostly already in a party, the Libertarian party. The media, controlled and beholden to the two parties that are in power, forcibly prevented the Libertarians from getting air time during the last election. Invitations to publicly aired debates were cancelled with little notice. Nader got a few minutes of air time, I have a sneaking suspicion the Republicans had something to do with that, since Nader was convienent to them at the time.

      Libertarians have a good chance of stealing votes from both Democrats and Republicans, so no party wants to mess with them unless they are desperate.

      So what should I do? I already write my congresspeople, often. It seems to only have an effect on the state legislators, the federal level ones just send form letters back, if at all. Half the time the form letter acts like I wrote in supporting the bills instead of opposing them, since they barely bother to read them.

      I call the congressional hotlines and make the staffers put my little tick marks down. I vote. I donate to Libertarians that have a chance of winning. I give to the EFF. I write these rants on Slashdot, I email my friends when shit goes down that the media ignores, I convince people to vote that are apethetic.

      It's not helping much. I may do enough to compensate for maybe ten people that don't care, but it isn't enough. With something like 85% of people willing to bend over and take anything the government dishes out, to protect their fantasy world of complacency that existed pre 9/11, what can we do?

      Signed,
      Frustrated.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    44. Re:As reported on the better site... by Chemical · · Score: 3, Funny
      Communists didn't believe in God so if we made everybody pledge "under God" then communism would go away.

      And it worked!

      Thank you Jebus!

    45. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      An interesting piece from the disenting judge.

      Lest I be misunderstood, I must emphasize that to decide this case it
      is not necessary to say, and I do not say, that there is such a thing as a de
      minimis constitutional violation. What I do say is that the de minimis tendency
      of the Pledge to establish a religion or to interfere with its free exercise
      is no constitutional violation at all.


      This is just false. I don't know if it has a name, but if not it should be called rounding error. If a tendency to murder doesn't constitute murder, then a tendency to establish religion does not constitute establishment of religion.

    46. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is not meant as a flame, but has the possibility occurred to you that the majority does not agree with Libertarianism? I know that I do not. I've never met a single Libertarian willing to concede the possibility, however. As a rule, Libertarians are the most certain people I meet. The Libertarians have a famous "questionnaire" which has questions couched in such a manner that Karl Marx would probably come out a Libertarian.

      I will tell you how I sympathize with Libertarians, however. One of the fundmental beliefs of Libertarianism is a fairly strict Adam Smith economic view coupled with a pretty hardline John Locke view of property. Minimum law, minimum government, minimum taxation, etc. In theory, the modern Republican party espouses the same line. At the same time, Republicans seem to want to pass the most legislation controlling behavior and government exploded in size under the Reagan and Bush adminsitrations. A Libertarian's theoretical alignment with the Republican party doesn't work out that way.

      Believe me, I have similar problems with the Democrats.

      Oh, and the media didn't exclude your party (at least from the Pres. & V.P. debates). The two parties did. This began when the "debate comission" was set up instead of debates sponsored by the League of Women Voters. Since that time, debates have become a pathetic joke.

      That aside, kudos to you for being active. These things take time. Republicanism took forty years to get anywhere (longer, if you count the rise of abolitionism as the beginning of Republican philosophy), and it took a Civil War to get them established as a permanent political force (the Republican party would probably not have become so thoroughly entrenched in the postwar North had not the South rebelled at the election of a Republican President). You have to make a committment to change that might not even come in your lifetime. The question is are you in it for the life of the nation and the betterment of the future, or are you in it because you want something now?

      I'd say you're on the right track. Keep going. No offense, but I hope you don't make it! ;-)

    47. Re:As reported on the better site... by coyote-san · · Score: 2

      If you think it's weird now, wait until you learn that many of our learned representatives were outraged that foreign nationals in our schools didn't want to recite any pledge of allegiance to the US. These kids aren't common, but they are present because their parents are working in the US for their overseas employer, are in foreign military units stationed at US bases or attached to Ameriacn units, are diplomats, etc.

      --
      For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
    48. Re:As reported on the better site... by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Wow.

      How arrogant can you Europeans get? The pledge is "political s***?" For the sake of argument, let's take out the "under God." What we're left with is basically the statement, "we like the US because everybody has a fair shot here" (at least in theory, of course. I know there are cases of injustice, and we don't claim to be perfect, but we have a system that improves itself as injustice is recognized, etc.) Why on earth would you not want your kid to learn that? "Liberty and justice for all?" Wow, that's dangerous, folks. Wouldn't want too much Liberty and Justice going on out there! The only other meaningful thing in there says that we're a united republic. All that's saying is that we have a good thing going here, and it would probably be good if we could all stick together on it.

      Heaven forbid anybody like their country, or teach their kids to like their country.

    49. Re:As reported on the better site... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm just spouting Libertarian certainty, but most of the people I question do agree with the basics of Libertarianism. They want freedom from the income tax, they know there would be huge economic benefits. They agree that pot should be legal, they agree that the drug war has often gone too far and is accomplishing little, except supporting a massive industry based on leeching the people's rights away.

      When it comes to following through on the consequences of living in a truely free society though, they are too weak.

      For example, my mom is a public school teacher. I completely sold her on the Libertarian party. She was almost ready to vote for them, she agreed with it completely, in regard to the drug war, freedoms, property rights, income tax, etc.

      Then I told her that there would be no public schools, since there is no reason for the government to be involved in a market in which there is demand, a method of collecting payment, and limited resources, one in which no monopoly exists. She balked at that of course.

      People agree with Libertarianism until they have to sacrifice their government handouts. Then they become instant liberals. A culture that wants freedom, but is unwilling to make even the most trivial sacrifices for it, is doomed.

      People only want to promote the free market as far as it benefits them. For example, I see a lot of people on here bashing the RIAA and MPAA for their protectionist practices, for trying to preserve their profits in the face of a cheaper alternative that a rational market will choose.

      Then I see those same people bashing the HB-1 visas that would allow cheap labor to become available in their market. What ever happened to the sort of thinking that Patrick Henry had when he made his famous speech?
      Are people so shallow these days, that they couldn't even sacrifice the smallest comfort for freedom, when our forefathers were willing to give their lives for the same freedoms?

      Anyway, I digress somewhat. I think most people are basically Libertarian, but only as far as it benefits them. As long as people elect politicians promising bigger handouts with no sacrifice, we are in a downward spiral.

      In Virginia, where I live, our govenor was elected on the platform of "NO CAR TAX!". He didn't really talk about any other views, just that. Bad things are happening, and grassroots change is going to be hard with people so selfish and shallow.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    50. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because you didn't finish the sentence. I can sympathize with your plight. You're were probably educated in public schools. I was too, but I did have one year of private education. Maybe that gave me an edge. If you read and comprehend the whole statement, then you'll understand that yes, you are pledging allegiance to the flag and the republic, but it goes on to say that the republic is a nation under God. So you're pledging allegiance to a republic that is described as being "under God," which is something that doesn't sit well with people whose religious beliefs don't correspond with the nitwits that added that phrase in the 50s. Besides, any mention of a religious figure should not be part included in the routine of a state-run school. Even the inclusion of the word "God" in the pledge gives monotheists some sort of acknowledgement while neglecting other religions as well as those who practice no religion. It simply shouldn't be part of the pledge.

    51. Re:As reported on the better site... by Danse · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree with most of the social thinking of libertarians, but I'm pretty well convinced that if they ever get any kind of control, we'll all be well and truly fucked. It's not that I don't think that a lot of it is worth a shot, it's just that in reading the writings of libertarian candidates, I don't trust them to make the transition in such a way that it doesn't create serious havoc and hardship.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    52. Re:As reported on the better site... by Danse · · Score: 2

      It's fine if the kids understand it and want to say it. It's the fact that they are compelled to say it by agents of the state that causes problems. You shouldn't be able to force patriotism on people, especially kids. It's ridiculous to make them say something like this when they can't even comprehend the meaning and don't have enough experience or information to decide for themselves whether they even believe what they're saying. What's the point then? To get them to believe it without question?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    53. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, I would say you are spouting Libertarian certainty. I fundamentally disagree withe every single one of your positions. I'm even happy to pay my income tax (well, maybe not happy, but I understand that it is good for the economy to have excess savings spent on capital investment, and that sometimes the private sector fails to to this, leading to economic contraction).

      I'm not Libertarian at all. I believe that we have "unalienable rights" and that to "secure these rights, governments are instituted among men" and that such governments "derive their just powers from the consent of governed."

      I think our instutions are doing just fine at requiring the consent of the governed. I think Libertarians delude themselves that the unpopularity of taxes equals support for the gutting of government. I think they are wrong. Ask anyone "Do you like to pay taxes?" and of course almost everyone will say "No." Ask them if they would rather pay taxes and have public roads, or would they rather all roads were built privately and privately owned and you had to pay a toll to use each separate private road, and they might not say yes. You might, but I would not.

      Roads are, in fact, one of the ways we got to the present size of government. Roads were highly in demand, but private enterprise was building very few of them. We talked about third parties? Are you aware that the largest 3rd party movement in 20th century history was the "Good Roads Party?" Yep. The people demanded that government get into the road building business. The construction of such roads has had immense secondary economic effects. You can argue that the roads would have been built eventually. I do not agree, and I have no way to prove such an assertion. But I would contest the notion that the expansion of government was done by "the government" for selfish or nefarious reasons. It was, in each case, responding to the democratic will.

      I, for one, believe that it is vital to have a major economic actor that views each citizen equally, rather than in proportion to his wallet (no, I'm not naieve enough to believe that the wallet doesn't still get in there and pervert things a bit).

      Perhaps some of the "selfish and shallow" are just not completely ignorant of macroeconomics.

      I would argue that your claim "most people are basically Libertarian, but only as far as it benefits them" means that most people are simply not Libertarian. I don't know why Libertarians refuse to see this. This is precisely what I was talking about.

      All that said, certainly there is plenty of room for debate about the limits of government power, about what amount of government involvement in the economy is the "right" amount, about which sorts of infrastructure are appropriate government functions. I just plain don't agree with you that the answers are "total, none, and none."

      I also think there's plenty of room for talking about how we are and how we should be taxed. I'm very much in favor of moving to fees for service and consumption taxes and away from income taxes and property taxes. I'm also in favor of more spending on roads and education. I'm in favor of subsidies for broadband expansion into rural areas (similar to the rural elctrification act), and other "big government, tax and spend" programs.

      And I don't mind paying taxes to do it.

    54. Re:As reported on the better site... by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1

      :-) Just a silly impulse.

    55. Re:As reported on the better site... by medscaper · · Score: 1

      Well, shit. I guess I suck at complaining, too.

      --
      Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
    56. Re:As reported on the better site... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Dude - you do not understand the H1-B visa issue (the fact that you didn't spell it right is also a pretty clear indication that you have not studied it in depth). H1-B visas are all about using government power to manipulate the labor market in favor of the big corps.

      Here is why: H1-B visas effectively indenture their holders to their employers. The law as written requires that employers pay a prevailing wage, but there is little to no enforcement mechanism and plenty of loopholes if enforcement ever actually is attempted.

      Despite H1-B being designated a non-immigrant visa most holders use it as stepping stone for a Green card because, unlike other non-immigrant visas, you are allowed to hold an H1-B while your application for a green card is in process. Those applications often take 3-4 years and are solely the domain of the employer - the green card applicant has no standing in the process - which is just messed up right there.

      Thus any H1-B holder who wants a green card (and that is at least 95% of them) must not leave their current employer for fear of having to restart their green card application process from scratch. Thus, as an employee becomes more experienced and familiar with a company's processes and systems (and thus more valuable as an employee) there is less and less incentive for the H1-B holder to seek a better paying job because they would be throwing away years spend in the application process if they were to find new, better paying, employment.

      That all makes for one messed up labor market, and one that is far, far from the ideals of a free market system. And don't think this situation is an accident. The megalocorps who are the employers of the majority of H1-B holders knew exactly what they were doing when they lobbied for this set of rules regarding H1-B and green cards.

      Many people who oppose H1-B are also protectionist in general. But the people who do have a strong belief in the free market understand that the sword cuts two ways -- possibly hurting their own economic prospects but at the same time enabling more efficient production the stuff they consume. These people, with true libertarian beliefs are just as much opposed to the H1-B visa program as they are in favor of totally open borders without any government-imposted restrictionon on the flow of labor.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    57. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 2

      I want to amplify a bit here. Let's go a little further with the Libertarian system of roads. Suppose you had a major landowner who owned substantial land between two urban centers, say Minneapolis and St. Paul. Suppose this person one day decided he wasn't going to let any Catholics use his roads. To whom would area Catholics appeal? Merchants have the right to refuse service to anyone. Such a landowner would be within his rights.

      Now lets expand this. How well do you think Libertarianism would have served an uneducated black man in Mississippi in 1870? I guess what I'm saying is that the "free market" isn't a guarantee of any kind of social equity or justice. If we agree that are such things as "freedom," "justice," and "fairness," some sort of law and some guarantee of access to redress is required.

      Without enough law to make and enforce contracts, there is no possibility but brigandism. You can get more with a kind word and a gun than with just a kind word. I do not want to live in such a world. Yes, autonomy is a natural state. Self sovereignty is a natural state. But we give up some of those rights to the collective entity (society, expressed in the form of a government). In return the power of the collective entity backs up our remaining soverignty and autonomy against other less scrupulous individuals.

      This is an old tension, but realize that while everybody hates taxes, not everobody even realizes all the good things that government does. I'm reminded of the bit from Monty Python's the Life of Brian:

      "They took our land. They've beaten and repressed us for years. And what have the Romans ever done for us?"

      Pause.

      "The Aquaduct?"

      "What?"

      "The Aquaduct?"

      "Oh, yeah, well they did do that. But apart from that, what have the Romans ever done for us?"

      "Sanitation."

      "Irrigation." "Housing." "The wine?" "The courts"

      "Oh yeah, the courts! Remember what the streets used to be like? They're probably the only people who could keep order in a place like this!"

      "Alright! Alright! But apart from irrigation, sanitation, agriculture, viniculture, roads, public housing and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?"

      Of course, under the DMCA I'm sure I'm in trouble for that long paraphrased quote. Yes, government makes bad and excessive law sometimes.

      Libertarians constantly remind me of the Judean People's Front...

    58. Re:As reported on the better site... by balthan · · Score: 1

      I believe this is one of the main problems with most libertarian cadidiates. There's no transition plan. Just cut income tax and repeal welfare and social security. If you do that overnight, it will create major chaos.

    59. Re:As reported on the better site... by Master+Bait · · Score: 1

      Amazing the posting went all the way to 5, then down to 1. Me and my buddies ACTUALLY used to say that substitute during Mandatory Pledge of Allegiance in high school before I got brave enough to sit it out. This was back during Vietnam War days, when people caught all sorts of hell for not being good little patriots. Similar to the way it is now, but more extreme back then.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    60. Re:As reported on the better site... by superyooser · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I had no idea that the "Family Values" crowd had a monopoly in Congress. "Congress took swift action to denounce a federal court decision ruling the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional, with the Senate voting 99-0 to condemn the court's decision. Immediately following the recitation of the pledge, members broke out into a chorus of Irving Berlin's "God Bless America."

      Note the picture. That picture is not from September 11, 2001, but from June 26, 2002. The third day of infamy.

    61. Re:As reported on the better site... by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      ---In fact, it says they CAN'T stop you from saying "Under God."---

      Indeed: but it seems to have slipped past you that neither does this decision. You can pledge allegience to as many flags as you want, with as many "under gods" as you please! This decision doesn't affect YOUR rights in the least: it merely CEASES to infringe upon the rights of those who choose not to recite the pledge in its current form.

      Nice try at confusing the issue though.

    62. Re:As reported on the better site... by vrai · · Score: 1
      or teach their kids to like their country

      You should not be teaching children to like (or believe) anything. You should give them the facts and let them make their own mind up.

    63. Re:As reported on the better site... by superyooser · · Score: 1
      It's ironic you should bring up Saddam Hussein. If he had been indoctrinated to believe in liberty and justice for all, he might not have been the ruthless dictator he is today.

      Is it better to indoctrinate kids with the belief that their country should strive for liberty and justice for all OR let them be "free-thinkers" and gamble that they will come to the right conclusion on their own? Do you want to indoctrinate them with the "answer key," which was discovered and formulated out of great human experience (many eyeballs) and endured centuries of trials and testing (LifeBugzilla), or let them flounder on their own, relying on naïve, youthful logic, untried objectives, and alpha-quality (as in code) ideas, and risk failure?

      <sarcasm>Yes, let's follow in the footsteps of Johnny Walker's parents. They refused to give any of that eeeevil, totalitarian-esque indoctrination; they wanted little Johnny to find his own way in life. And what a successful parenting strategy that was!</sarcasm>

      But what if you're not sure that your truth is the right truth? IMHO, a survival-of-the-fittest theory applies to "truths." It basically says, "Will the real Truth please stand up?" And it does. And it perseveres, because it is "fittest."

      Hitler's propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels based all of his strategy on the maxim, "Whoever says the first word to the world is always right." This is indoctrination. Did it work? No. The real truth bubbled to the top over time. It was fittest -- most conforming to the historical record preserved in the space-time continuum. Truth cannot be hidden forever. Reality is: Whoever says the last word to the world is always right.

      Wonder Who gets the last word of all?

    64. Re:As reported on the better site... by Mark+Bainter · · Score: 2
      In theory, the modern Republican party espouses the same line.

      Shyeah. And in theory, so do the democrats when they want to get elected. Republicans tend to fall close (at least in theory) on the economic side, but on the social side they hit wide of the mark.

      Republicanism took forty years to get anywhere (longer, if you count the rise of abolitionism as the beginning of Republican philosophy), and it took a Civil War to get them established as a permanent political force

      Heh. The republican party of that day is the democrat party of today, and the republican party of today were democrats then. The two parties switched roles almost overnight sometime after reconstruction. Sadly, I can't remember the date, (I blame it on it being too early in the morning).

      --
      "No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
      --James Madison
    65. Re:As reported on the better site... by mpe · · Score: 2

      Where is the seperation of power when you have only two political parties in power,

      Indeed it's rather hard to find any section of government in the US, at any level. Which is not utterly dominated by these two parties

      and they often have the same views on important issues related to freedom?

      Probably explains low voter registration and turnout in the US. If someone cannot find a candidate to represent their views then any vote they make is a wasted vote anyway.

    66. Re:As reported on the better site... by mpe · · Score: 2

      Uh, in the Constitution, where it is specifically forbidden for the government to limit the people's right to petition the government for the redress of greivances.

      How can this be made to work in a world where commercial and political special interest groups have full time professional lobbiest. Who are also very good at making sure that voices other than their own don't get heard.

    67. Re:As reported on the better site... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Without enough law to make and enforce contracts, there is no possibility but brigandism.

      Don't confuse Libertarianism with anarchy. No one is proposing we eliminate the courts, or eliminate the enforcement of contract law.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    68. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an American student who recently graduated high school, I can clearly tell you that we are hardly indoctrinated.

      Most of the kids don't even say it anymore, they just stand there, moving their lips, mumbling. Additionally, we've been saying it EVERY DAY since kindergarten, so it becomes mechanical and meaningless.

    69. Re:As reported on the better site... by Flagran · · Score: 1
      I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
      And to the republic for which it stands
      One nation, indivisible,
      With liberty and justice for all
      Actually, the original text was:
      I pledge allegiance to my flag
      And to the republic for which it stands
      One nation, indivisble,
      With liberty and justice for all

      Source:Home of Heroes

      --
      Make love, not sigs
    70. Re:As reported on the better site... by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      You should not be teaching children to like (or believe) anything. You should give them the facts and let them make their own mind up.

      This sounds really nice and liberal, but when you think about it, it makes no sense. Kids need to be taught; after all, they're kids, and they're not yet completely equipped to make value judgments. Parents are supposed to guide them toward the way they should live their lives.

      Say, for instance, that your second grade son makes a habit of involuntarily collecting lunch money every day from his classmates. They don't like it, but he's making quite a nice living from it. How do you, as a parent, respond? If you tell him it's wrong to do that, you're telling him what to believe. If you simply tell him the facts, you're stuck with basically saying, "Son, if you keep up this way of life, you might end up in prison some day. What you're doing is not nice." And you certainly couldn't punish the kid; after all, that's coercion toward a particular belief (that stealing is wrong).

      They're kids. If you leave them on their own, or just tell them "the facts" (of which they're generally pretty perceptive anyway), you get a society like "Lord of the Flies." Not where I want to live.

    71. Re:As reported on the better site... by ivrcti · · Score: 1

      I have very strong feelings about this case, that may not agree with yours. However, I would like to acknowledge the clarity and strength of your arguement. One of the things I love about our country is that I can enjoy intelligent, rational discussion of virtually any topic, even if I might disagree with the findings. Keep up the good work!

    72. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A little off-topic, but in response to the poster's comments about Republicans and Democrats.

      A rule of thumb that always seems to work for me is:

      Republicans want to tell you what you can't do.
      Democrats want to tell you what you have to do.

      I guess I can add to that:

      Libertarians don't care what you do.

    73. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 2

      Oh, I agree with you that one of the ways in which money distorts the equality of citizens is through the lobbyist industry, but nothing they do prevents your voice from being heard. I had a friend who worked in a congressman's office in his home state. Do you know how many letters on a subject it took for the congressman to want to be told about them? Five. Five letters.

      There a handful of issues (gun laws, abortion, etc.) that always generate thousands of letters. Most legilation that really affects our lives (telco deregulation, DMCA, etc.) get passed without any direct input from the public at all.

      So, I agree with you that the lobbyists are magnifying the interests of the few, but they are not diminishing your influence at all.

    74. Re:As reported on the better site... by oooga · · Score: 1

      Tell me about it. I'm so ashamed of Joey. For one of the first really high-profile Jewish politicians (he was elected vise-president, for dingle-berry's sake) he sure is one huge motherfucking God's-asshole-licking pile of shit.

      --
      -- Nerds on toast in the new millenium
    75. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 2

      I don't confuse Libertarianism with anarchy. I'm just saying that the expansion of government power came about through an expansion of the greivances the people petitioned the government to address. I'm suggesting that even if through some divine intervention we became a Libertarian government today, we would be back at a system very similar to the present one in a couple of generations because it was the democratic process that got us here, not some sort of government conspiracy.

      This is the base fact that is continually ignored.

    76. Re:As reported on the better site... by samdu · · Score: 1

      I'll also bet that most "Libertarians" don't actually pass the test for a Libertarian. I consider myself a Libertarian, but don't come close to subscribing to all of the tenets of the Libertarian party. Basically, I believe that people should be able to do what they want to do as long as it doesn't keep others from doing the same. That necessitates a small, unintrusive government. Now, that being said, I generally vote Republican. Why? First, because the Libs haven't ahd a hope of getting someone elected in my voting lifetime. I do vote for them for smaller offices where they may have a chance, but they never seem to get there. The Republican agenda seems to be one of keeping as much of the Government's hands out of the people's money as possible. This is a good thing. I make the money, I should decide where it goes. They also want to dictate moral behaviour. This is bad as that's really not the job of government outside of upholding reasonable laws put in place to protect us from each other (not ourselves). The Dems on the other hand, seem to want to opposite. They want us to send all of the money we make to Washington so that they can decide where it needs to go and what it needs to be spent on. They also don't seem to care much what goes on in my bedroom or what substances I put in my body. The problem, and the reason I tend to vote Republican, is that the bad side of the Democrat agenda is much easier to pass through legislation. People tend to fall for the guilt trip put on being successful before they fall for the Republican chicken little scams used to take away personal liberties. So, it is more difficult for the Republicans to pass their "bad" legislation, and I like the other aspects of their ideas, so that's the way I usually vote. But I still consider myself a Libertarian.

      -Sam

    77. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the same guy who tried this before, I guess this time he got the right people to hear his case. This guy also has a JD degree and deals with constitutional issues... seems to me this is a personal agenda which he has thrust upon the rest of the U.S.

      Excerpt from freethoughttoday.com from November 1999

      Physician Michael Newdow of Broward County, Florida, has appealed the dismissal of his 1998 lawsuit seeking to remove "under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance and restore its original language dating to 1892. The part-time resident of Fort Lauderdale is suing on behalf of his daughter, 5.

      U.S. District Judge Ursula Ungaro-Benages dismissed the case because his daughter wasn't yet school-age. Newdow argues that permitting his daughter to sit out the pledge, as provided for by a 1940's Supreme Court case, still subjects her to outsider status and religious dogma in school. The court has not considered the pledge since it was amended to include "under God" in 1948, although it recently let stand a federal court ruling dismissing a similar challenge out of Chicago. The U.S. House didn't open each daily session with the pledge until 1988, and the U.S. Senate didn't follow suit until June 24 this year.

    78. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actualy it was the republican process that got us here. Old and tired fact, the US is not a democracy, it is a republic. We are set up in such a fashion that government is encouraged to pander to the natural human desire to get something for nothing. Politicians constantly make promises and often follow through on those promises to bring home the ham for their constiuency. Because of the nature of taxation, the cost of the pork is disassociated from receiving of the pork. (As an aside, this happens with income tax in general, since most people have their income tax taken out of their paycheck by their employer before they ever see it, the psychological connection between the huge amount of income tax people pay and the services they get from the government is fairly tenuous).

      Anyway, it is my belief as a highly exaulted A.C. that if the system were re-organized such that our representatives in this republic were not so clearly motivated to bring home the bacon for their constituency we would not be pickle we are now. An overnight conversion to libertarianism would probably be sufficient to remove this motivation, but it would be extremely painful too. I am sure there are other approaches that would be less painful, more likely to actually happen and reasonably effective too.

    79. Re:As reported on the better site... by catfood · · Score: 2
      Indeed it's rather hard to find any section of government in the US, at any level. Which is not utterly dominated by these two parties

      If you get two you're doing well these days. Here in .cleveland.oh.us the two parties are the Dimora Democrats and the O'Malley Democrats. Many state legislative seats are uncontested.

    80. Re:As reported on the better site... by elmegil · · Score: 1
      Parents are supposed to guide them toward the way they should live their lives.

      And the public schools (and I'd argue ANY school) are not parents. What's your point?

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    81. Re:As reported on the better site... by mpe · · Score: 2

      Oh, I agree with you that one of the ways in which money distorts the equality of citizens is through the lobbyist industry,

      No doubt some lobby groups are actually publically funded

      There a handful of issues (gun laws, abortion, etc.) that always generate thousands of letters.

      Because there are plenty of organisations with views from all sides of the debate and the issue is likely to be raised in the press so people actually know about it.

      Most legilation that really affects our lives (telco deregulation, DMCA, etc.) get passed without any direct input from the public at all.

      Most people probably didn't know it existed at all. With most of those who did being the lobbiests who wrote it.

    82. Re:As reported on the better site... by evilpenguin · · Score: 2

      You are being a bit pedantic. We have a democratic republic. It is possible to have a non-democratic republic. The "indirection" of a representative system improves the effectiveness of legislation. All you have to do is take a look at referendum states to see what kind of a mess direct citizen legislation can cause. It is the democratic nature of our republic that cuases the constant expansion of government influence, so my original remark stands as far as I am concerned.

    83. Re:As reported on the better site... by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      And the public schools (and I'd argue ANY school) are not parents. What's your point?

      I completely agree. The point is that the parent post said "you" should not be teaching children to like or believe anything in particular. The poster didn't bother to narrow the scope of the "you", and I figured it unreasonable to assume that he/she meant me specifically, since to my knowledge I have never had previous interaction with the poster. Therefore, I was responding to the idea of nobody at all teaching kids what to like or believe. I take it you agree parents should teach their kids what to like and believe, which makes me very happy.

    84. Re:As reported on the better site... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, nobody is prohibiting anybody from reciting the pledge of allegiance. You may do so if you wish. You may also pray if you wish. But school is not the place for worship. If you want to worship, go to church(or a mosque, or a synagogoue or a temple or any religious building) or do so outside. By forcing, or encouraging children to repeat religious speech, the government is blatantly violating the seperation between church and state. The United States is a secular government. This is the same doctrine that prevents prayer or Bible readings in class.

      "Oh, and may I point out one more thing? The State of California, which ALLEGEDLY requires reciting of the pledge, is NOT the Congress named in the Constitution. Therefore, the Constitution does NOTHING to prevent the state of California from requiring the recitation of the pledge. Think about it. "

      By that logic, the California legislature could forbid criticism of the government or society. If the California state government is not the "Congress" mentioned in the first amendment, it must also have the right to violate every other right. 1st amendment rights apply to every branch of government, from town councils to state legislatures to the Federal Congress.

    85. Re:As reported on the better site... by elmegil · · Score: 2
      I should have said "society" not "you".

      Parents are the ones who are responsible for all this. I may disagree strongly with some parents, but I cannot dispute that it is their role to fulfill or not, in whatever way suits them. To do otherwise erodes my own right as a parent to teach my children what is right and wrong.

      Schools are there to educate; to teach facts and to provide a social forum to learn about other people. They're not there to indoctrinate the children in patriotism, belief in God, or whatever (unless you should choose to send your child to a religious school, but that's a whole different matter).

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
  12. Yeah... by JanusFury · · Score: 0, Troll

    It's not like our country protects us with military and law enforcement or anything. We don't owe them nothing, 'specially no dumb 'pledge of allegiance'.

    --
    using namespace slashdot;
    troll::post();
    1. Re:Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me: did it require a lot of effort to be as collossally stupid as you are now? Or is it natural talent?

    2. Re:Yeah... by Oztun · · Score: 2

      them == us, doh!

    3. Re:Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you kidding me? Did you read the article at ALL?

      Why don't you try doing that and then come back. If you still stand behind that post, then kindly die.

    4. Re:Yeah... by DeltaSigma · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that as a democracy the government owes us. Then of course, we're not a democracy, we're a republic, which is a different matter entirely...

    5. Re:Yeah... by AmishSlayer · · Score: 1

      you are sadly mistaken... we do not owe our government anything our government eternally owes us. That is the point of a democracy. The government works for us and defends everyone including the non-christain minorty in turn we sopport the government with our citezens (acting as the military and police) and we fund the government with our money.

    6. Re:Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm.. the entire pledge wasnt rules unconstitutional, just a statute which added specific words to it. Next time read the document first before posting..

    7. Re:Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Consider the number of court cases where it has been established that the police have NO duty to protect us lil' people, only to document what happened after everything is over. The military is another story...


      And for all of you blissninnies who think guns are bad, think about what you're asking for when you call the cops. You're asking for someone to come and possibly commit gun violence on your behalf. Hypocrite.

    8. Re:Yeah... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does that have to do with the discussion at hand jackass?

      Anyway, they fight for our freedom, and if some person wishes to be a dick, they have every right, as that is the freedom they are fighting for. That is the gift. People choose on there own wether or not/how they will honor the sacrifices they make. That is what this country is about. So stop trying to make decisions for other people, you are working against what people are fighting for.

      So some people will choose not to honor them...so what? isn't the point of freedom to have the choice to do so? People will always be selfish...you can't cure the world, not do you have the right.

      Anyway, I am sure that many people will still acknowledge the sacrifices they make regardless...

  13. What is this country coming to? by ktulu1115 · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is totally absurd. The foundation and tradition of our country has been deemed 'unconstitutional' Could someone please explain what this country is going to? The next thing you know it will be illegial or unlawful to utter the word 'God' in public. So much for the founding fathers with their Christian beliefs.

    --
    # fuser -v /dev/attention | grep work
    #
    1. Re:What is this country coming to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No troll, all that has happened is that children cannot be forced to profess belief in God in the form of the pledge of allegiance.

      Everybody is still free to say it whenever or however they want as long as no one is being forced or coerced too.

    2. Re:What is this country coming to? by StefanJ · · Score: 2
      The Pledge of Allegiance is not the "foundation and tradition of our country." Objecting to the addition of a couple of words added during the Cold War is not an attack on the Constitution.

      It is a gross oversimplification, bordering on wishful thinking, to imagine that Christian beliefs were the unique founding principles of this country. The Founding Fathers were Enlightment-era intellectuals -- many of them deists and Freemasons -- who knew exactly what they were doing when they set up strict barriers between church and state.

    3. Re:What is this country coming to? by Lurkingrue · · Score: 1

      What is totally absurd is your suggestion that the "founding fathers" were pushing "Christian beliefs" or even had them...Ever hear of Jefferson, Franklin, or Adams (Samuel)? What do you think their attitude was towards religion?

      The US of A was very clearly founded on a separation of Church and State, not institutionalizing brainwashing. We should be free to believe what we want to believe, and have the freedom of religion even if that means having none.

    4. Re:What is this country coming to? by RedHat+Rocky · · Score: 1

      I see. So, you don't go for the whole "Melting Pot of the World" idea? The foundation of this country was religous freedom. Not religions limited to Christianity, but all religions as well as those praticing NO religion. Granted, the founding fathers didn't really intend this as it was beyond their limited scope, but we have become more enlightened as a people since then, as well as adding swells of different religous viewpoints, all from American Citizens.

      What right do the majority have to make the minority pay homage to the majority's views?

      --
      Anything is possible given time and money.
    5. Re:What is this country coming to? by ktulu1115 · · Score: 1

      According to Jefferson: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights..."

      If that doesn't sound like a God, then I don't know what does.

      And why hasn't the almighty US currency been deemed unconstitutional yet? Citizens don't have much of a choice to change that, yet children in grade school do not have to recite the pledge if they choose.

      --
      # fuser -v /dev/attention | grep work
      #
    6. Re:What is this country coming to? by ZeroConcept · · Score: 5, Informative

      "The next thing you know it will be illegial or unlawful to utter the word 'God' in public"

      The same law that prohibits the government from promoting any religion, prohibits the government from censoring any particular religion

      "So much for the founding fathers with their Christian beliefs"

      The founding fathers were not Christian:
      The Founding Fathers Were Not Christians
      The Faith of our Founding Fathers
      Is America founded on a Christian Tradition?
      The Founding Fathers Were Not Christians
      Notes on the Founding Fathers and the Separation of Church and State
    7. Re:What is this country coming to? by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Actually... as I remember MY history class the "creator" wording was not sometrhing Jefferson wanted in the document and only put it there to help it gain acceptance among the other people involved in the document.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    8. Re:What is this country coming to? by Jouster · · Score: 1

      Yes, especially Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin, some of our country's best-known Christians.

      Er, wait, they weren't Christian. Never mind.

      Jouster

    9. Re:What is this country coming to? by mkoenecke · · Score: 1

      "Deists and Freemasons." Puh-leeze. By and large, they were pretty much a bunch of Anglicans with a Quaker or two tossed in. This does not vitiate the First Amendment, but frankly it shows an ignorance of real history to buy into the "deists and Freemasons" claptrap. Yeah, I suppose you could argue Jefferson was a deist. He had pretty much zero influence on the Constitution. Beyond that, I'd love to see a "deist" roll call.

      --
      TANSTAAFL
    10. Re:What is this country coming to? by Ionized · · Score: 1

      how about james madison?
      or benjamin franklin?
      john adamn, perhaps?
      thomas paine?

      http://www.dimensional.com/~randl/founders.htm
      http://www.postfun.com/pfp/worbois.html

      zing!

    11. Re:What is this country coming to? by Ionized · · Score: 1

      oh yeah, and abraham lincoln (altho not a founding father, still a very influential figure in american history)

    12. Re:What is this country coming to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod this up! what the hell is up with you people??

    13. Re:What is this country coming to? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      In other words the majority of the founders' belief in God resulted in the wording being put in. So the founders weren't a bunch of atheists after all.

    14. Re:What is this country coming to? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      And the name of the religion that is being promoted by the pledge of alliegence is? Oh, it's not a particular religion but merely a promotion of faith in general? Why that would mean it's constitutional!

    15. Re:What is this country coming to? by Yunzil · · Score: 2

      If that doesn't sound like a God, then I don't know what does.

      That's not what the original poster said. He said they didn't have Christian beliefs.

    16. Re:What is this country coming to? by LowellPorter · · Score: 1

      Many of the founding fathers had degrees from seminaries and were religeous.. I dare say Christian. So to say our founding fathers weren't Christian, is inaccurate. 27 had seminary degrees.
      Check out:
      www.geocities.com/gregoryjrummo/religiousrig ht.htm

    17. Re:What is this country coming to? by ZeroConcept · · Score: 2

      "And the name of the religion that is being promoted by the pledge of alliegence is? Oh, it's not a particular religion but merely a promotion of faith in general? Why that would mean it's constitutional!"

      In this case is not a specific religion but the group of monotheists religions that call the one deity "God". There are many people that believe in religions with a number of deities, in the case of Hindu religions you will find deities such as Shiva, Kali, Gamesh, etc.

      Having government sponsored schools (in private schools promoting any particular religion is fair game) in which the children have to repeat the name of a deity every single day is considered inappropriate in a country in which the constitution prevents the government for favoring/censoring a religion or a group of religions.

      How would you feel as a Christian/Jew/etc. If instead of "God" it was "Allah" or "Brahma"?

      Cheers,
    18. Re:What is this country coming to? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Is the establishment clause talking about *an* establishment of religion or is it an *establishment* of religion. The verbal emphasis matters and history is on the side of the first reading. The strict segregationists like the latter.

    19. Re:What is this country coming to? by ZeroConcept · · Score: 2

      "The Christian god can easily be pictured as virtually the same god as the many ancient gods of past civilizations. The Christian god is a three headed monster; cruel, vengeful and capricious. If one wishes to know more of this raging, three headed beast-like god, one only needs to look at the caliber of people who say they serve him. They are always of two classes: fools and hypocrites."

      [Thomas Jefferson, letter to his nephew, Peter Carr]

      "My parents had early given me religious impressions, and brought me through my childhood piously in the dissenting [puritan] way. But I was scarce fifteen, when, after doubting by turns of several points, as I found them disputed in the different books I read, I began to doubt of Revelation itself. Some books against Deism fell into my hands; they were said to be the substance of sermons preached at Boyle's lectures. [Robert Boyle (1627-1691) was a British physicist who endowed the Boyle Lectures for defense of Christianity.] It happened that they wrought an effect on me quite contrary to what was intended by them; for the arguments of the deists, which were quoted to be refuted, appeared to me much stronger than the refutations; in short, I soon became a thorough deist."

      [Benjamin Franklin, "Autobiography,"p.66 as published in The American Tradition in Literature, seventh edition (short), McGraw-Hill,p.180]

      "It is much to be lamented that a man of Franklin's general good character and great influence should have been an unbeliever in Christianity, and also have done as much as he did to make others unbelievers."

      [Priestley's Autobiography, p. 60, on Benjamin Franklin]

      "The divinity of Jesus is made a convenient cover for absurdity. Nowhere in the Gospels do we find a precept for Creeds, Confessions, Oaths, Doctrines, and whole carloads of other foolish trumpery that we find in Christianity."

      [John Adams]

      Guess they weren't shy about their opinions

      Cheers,

    20. Re:What is this country coming to? by Skyshadow · · Score: 2
      Many of the founding fathers had degrees from seminaries and were religeous.. I dare say Christian. So to say our founding fathers weren't Christian, is inaccurate. 27 had seminary degrees.

      The Founding Fathers were all men. This means that most (if not all) of them masturbated on a regular basis -- would *you* screw Martha Washington? We live in a country founded by prolific masturbaters.

      What does this have to do with our conversation? Absolutely nothing, just like your "point".

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    21. Re:What is this country coming to? by ZeroConcept · · Score: 2

      It means that the government cannot have a stance on religion other than neutrality, it's none of the government's business to promote or censor any kind of religious movement whether established or trying to establish. It means that the government as an entity should have no influence to the acceptance or rejection on any religious beliefs.

      It grants individuals and organizations total freedom in promoting or censoring any religious beliefs using legal means as long as such effort is not being sponsored by public funds.

    22. Re:What is this country coming to? by Kymermosst · · Score: 2

      Nice unbiased sources you have there.

      I'll point out that the sources you just gave describe just a handful of our founding fathers, when in fact, there were many more than those few, and many of them were Christians.

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    23. Re:What is this country coming to? by LowellPorter · · Score: 1

      What does this have to do with our conversation? Absolutely nothing, just like your "point".

      My point was meant to deal with the parent post I responded to. If you had read the ENTIRE line of posts where I had made that comment, you would have seen that the parent post said that our founding fathers weren't christians and gave some internet links to "prove" his points. I was merely responding to him because I believe him to be wrong and gave a link supporting my position.

    24. Re:What is this country coming to? by fermion · · Score: 1
      It really depends on how you define christian. It is true that many of the founding fathers were not what we would today call christian, but they did have beliefs of christian decent.

      For instance, a fair number of those we call the founding fathers, were what we would now call Unitarians. They are often classified as Unitrians, Congregationalist, or Diest. There are trinitarian congregationalist, who, of course, are not Unitarian.

      The point is that these people were not Christian Fundementalist, though they were, like many modern unitarians and congregationalist, christian.

      So, the point holds. The sources, though flawed, are accurate.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    25. Re:What is this country coming to? by althalus · · Score: 1

      The same law that prohibits the government from promoting any religion, prohibits the government from censoring any particular religion That's funny, considering many religions have been much more than censored. During the 1800's it was actually legal to kill anyone belonging to the LDS Church, besides having many other things done to them, I'd consider that a little above simple censorship.

    26. Re:What is this country coming to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there were many more than those few, and many of them were Christians.


      True, but original author implied they ALL were...

  14. Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by StefanJ · · Score: 3, Informative
    "In God We Trust" was added to US currency in the 1950s, a few years after the Pledge of Allegiance was amended.

    http://www.moneyfactory.com/document.cfm/18/107

    I imagine the legislations to add these were made in the same spirit as attempts to put the Ten Commandments in schools and courtrooms.

    1. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by MaxwellStreet · · Score: 2

      Yep ... right about the time that all those southern states (Georgia notably) starting putting the confederate stars & bars in protest of the Jim Crow laws getting repealed.

    2. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong.

      It (In GOD we trust) was added during the civil war.

      http://www.ustreas.gov/education/fact-sheets/cur re ncy/in-god-we-trust.html

    3. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Telastyn · · Score: 1

      And if you read to the bottom of that link you can see that it wa not on paper money until 1964.

    4. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      Seems that the 50s were plauged with congressional fundies making all of the rules. Along with that eisenhower character (great general btw), we nearly had ourselves a fundamentalist government. Scary.

    5. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Funny
      "In God We Trust" was added to US currency in the 1950s, a few years after the Pledge of Allegiance was amended.
      Actually, it's a typo. The real phrase is "In gold we trust".
    6. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by interiot · · Score: 2

      Here are more details along the same lines.

    7. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by phyxeld · · Score: 2
      Seems that the 50s were plauged with congressional fundies making all of the rules. Along with that eisenhower character (great general btw), we nearly had ourselves a fundamentalist government. Scary.
      It was because of the Athiest Red Threat.
      No, seriously!
      The court said the 1954 insertion of "under God" was made "to recognize a Supreme Being" and advance religion at a time "when the government was publicly inveighing against atheistic communism" -- a fact, the court said, the federal government did not dispute.

      The appeals court noted that when President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the act adding "under God," he said, "From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our Nation and our people to the Almighty."
      [cnn]
      --
      __
      Choose mnemonic identifiers. If you can't remember what mnemonic means, you've got a problem. - Larry Wall
    8. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, the AC is right. The precedent was set during the Civil War. Which is not surprising since the abolitionists (who made up a large part of the rump government once the Confederate states tried to leave) were extremely Christian folks. Read about John Brown and Harper's Ferry if you don't believe me. Better yet, read "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and see what finally got people in the north angry about slavery.

      I'm not saying it's good to have a government that promotes a particular religion. But you should be aware that this phenomenon is not isolated to the 1950's, 1980's, and 2000's.

    9. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by grytpype · · Score: 1, Troll

      Our money says "In God We Trust" because there wasn't enough room to write "America is populated and run by a bunch of ignorant crackers who don't deserve the enlightened system of government Jefferson and Madison established for them."

      --

      - Have a picture

    10. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      freemasons put it there. look it up.

    11. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the AC is wrong. It was up to the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury to put it on money or not until 1956. Many coins did not contain the phrase. In 1956 it became the law of the land.

    12. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually, it's a typo. The real phrase is "In gold we trust".

      Which would be wrong today. It should read, "In Economic Stability We Trust".
    13. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      So sad, so true

    14. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by jag164 · · Score: 2

      Jefferson and Madison were morons. It's amazing how well off this country is when our founding fathers were just as corrupt, if not more, as the shmoes running the goverment, Enron, AA, and Worldnet today.

      The melting pot people have made this country, not the gov't. Gov't is just a neccessary evil.

    15. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Early coins are more interesting, and to the point without being so religious. One of the very first coins, the Fugio Cent, says Mind Your Business among other things. It's one of my favorite coins.

    16. Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by grytpype · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Not to defend Jefferson and Madison as people, but their insistence on codifying the principal of religious toleration (which is what this whole kerfuffle is about) is, I think, one of the things that made America great.

      America is not a free country in many respects, but one area where freedom is absolute is in religious belief, and we have Madison (especially) to thank for that. It was a huge intellectual leap, gotta love the Enlightenment!

      Of course, some (like George II, who was saved from his coke-snorting and boozing by Baby Jesus apparently) would disagree.

      Wish I had more time to write on the subject, maybe I'll post a followup later. Until then, I'll just say "Ecrasez l'infame!"

      --

      - Have a picture

  15. about fscking time by dl248 · · Score: 1

    freaking americans got things right for once.

    1. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you fuckers noticed for a change

    2. Re:about fscking time by George+Michael · · Score: 1

      Well, the funny thing is, the Constitution has said the right thing all along. It's just been the last 50 years or so that we've been ignoring the "no law respecting an establishment of religion" part.

      It's funny, though, that the U.S. has gone from being the most liberal nation in the world (the above idea was, of course, radical at the time) to being among the most conservative/fascist in the so-called civilized world.

    3. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm glad to chime in with a "shut up!" now.

      Freaking whatever-the-hell-you-are!

    4. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoo hoo! You used the "facist" buzzword!

      This means that ALL your opinions, from now till the end of time, are completely invalid with me. You have incontrovertibly proven that your mere existence wastes oxygen.

    5. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with being among the most conservative? If the United States did 'the right thing' by becoming a representative republic, then perhaps adding to it, or taking from it, is a step away from perfection. I mean, if you're right, why change one's opinion just because everybody else says you're wrong. That's putting the 'demos' in democracy.

      What really chaps my hide is how a religious belief set is taught in schools daily and nobody notices it as such. It is a religion that is so ubiquitious that few dare challenge it without being called a crackpot.

      Neither Evolution as taught in secondary education, nor the Big Bang have been proven (I feel the heat coming on). The 'Divinity of Man' as taught by this religion--that we are the pinnacle of evolution; is laughable. "Just Give us enough time and we'll evolve out of all the problems we ourselves create."

      Give me a break.

    6. Re:about fscking time by Christianfreak · · Score: 1

      It's just been the last 50 years or so that we've been ignoring the "no law respecting an establishment of religion"

      That is unless you believe that the law was originally intended to keep the government out of the church rather than the other way around. In other words to keep the government from mandating a national religion not to keep the government from saying they ascribe to a certain religion.

      I think laws that say kids can't pray in school or bring Bibles for their own reading, or teachers can't say what they believe (not teach just say) is wrong and should be overturned... we're so worried about one group's right that we are ignoring several other group's rights and mandating that everyone have no belief in God.

      If the government wants to say "under God" in the pledge then I say they should be able to do that It not trampling anyone's rights. The alternative is to declare all current laws and the constitution itself unconstitutional as it was based on many Judeo-Christian traditions in the first place.

      Okay I've got my flame-suit on for the anti-religion crowd: you may fire away

    7. Re:about fscking time by Ex-Parrot · · Score: 1
      I think laws that say kids can't pray in school or bring Bibles for their own reading, or teachers can't say what they believe (not teach just say) is wrong and should be overturned... we're so worried about one group's right that we are ignoring several other group's rights and mandating that everyone have no belief in God.

      I don't think any such laws have ever been enacted. Some school administrators mistook court rulings on prayer in schools to mean absolutely no prayer instead of no school-mandated prayer.

      Here's what I think is the tricky part. From a certain point of view, atheism can be considered a form of religious belief. No one thinks it's an organized religion, of course, but it is a belief system. Thus, from a certain point of view, it often appears that the government is favoring atheism over other religions.

      The real problem is the whole "Congress shall make no law" part of the Bill of Rights was ignored a few times. It would have been so simple if absolutely no laws regarding religion in any form had ever been passed. There was hardly any opposition when they were passed (throughout the nation's history), and now that there is opposition, we have one mell of a hess to clean up.

      My take on it is that it's okay to return the Pledge of Allegiance to its original form, but that reciting the Pledge is not inherently bad. I think it would help if public schools had a required course about the principles on which the nation was really founded. So many people today seem to have no idea what their rights really are. That means they don't exercise the rights they have, and they expect rights they don't have.

      --
      To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation. -- St. Augustine
    8. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That is unless you believe that the law was originally intended to keep the government out of the church rather than the other way around.

      I don't believe that. And thank goodness, the courts seem to generally agree.

      I think laws that say kids can't pray in school or bring Bibles for their own reading, or teachers can't say what they believe (not teach just say) is wrong

      I agree. Furthermore, there generally aren't laws that say things like this. You can pray in school if you want or bring your bible to read. It's just that the school can't sanction these things. Teachers can state their beliefs -- they just have to represent them as their beliefs and not fact.

      If the government wants to say "under God" in the pledge then I say they should be able to do that It not trampling anyone's rights.

      I disagree -- people can say these things, but the government shouldn't be able to mandate it. What if the president and a majority of congress were Islamic, and changed the pledge to "under Allah"? You'd probably be fairly pissed. I suspect that if this happened, most Christians would finally see what irks the rest of us so much about these sorts of things.

    9. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but every time we do, we fsck things up even worse after.

    10. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually in reality, if schools were doing thier job, there wouldnt be enough time in the day for students to do anything outside of learning. We really need to focus more on learning and less on sociallizing students. For now, the school has become a political battlegroud for the culture wars. Really saying God or not saying God isn't freaking important. What is important is being competent. People have just lost sight of the big picture of school.

    11. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what the heck does saying the pledge of allegiance have anything to do with learning? Nothing, its a waste of time, that's 15 minutes extra a day that could be used for learning something more important, Even just basic physical exercises done in 15 minutes would return a greater value to the students then standing there reciting the plegde. That time adds up, and it should be valuable. School is for learning to be competent and getting value.

    12. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "to being among the most conservative/fascist in the so-called civilized world. "

      Yeah, as long as we follow your definition of conservative/fascits which is just that , your own private defintion, I personally don't give a fuck about.
      Got it ?

    13. Re:about fscking time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the government wants to say "under God" in the pledge then I say they should be able to do that It not trampling anyone's rights

      Sure it is. My religious beliefs preclude the notion that our nation can be "under God." But if the government forces me to say that pledge, they're making me act in violation of my religious beliefs. Clearly a violation of the 1st amendment

      The alternative is to declare all current laws and the constitution itself unconstitutional as it was based on many Judeo-Christian traditions in the first place.

      There are plenty of morality laws that should be declared unconstitutional (drug possession, assisted suicide, etc. IOW victimless crimes), but not all laws are merely morality laws. While the government should not be proscribing actions that take place between informed, consenting adults, when consent is lacking, information is being willfully withheld, or minors are involved, the government has a duty to protect its citizens and/or provide restitution for victims.

    14. Re:about fscking time by neoform · · Score: 1

      go look up the word religion. Athiesm is NOT a religion. why? Because a religion is "a belief in a supernatural being" (websters definition). Shame us athiests don't have any of that god stuff, otherwise you might actually be right.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    15. Re:about fscking time by Ex-Parrot · · Score: 1
      I was using the word "religion" to mean a belief system in general. Believing that there is no God is still a belief. I admit that it wasn't the best term to use, but I hope you see my point.

      Regardless, I don't actually think of atheism as a religion. I was simply trying to explain one of the reasons Christians sometimes feel persecuted when the government takes any position whatsoever regarding religion in any form.

      --
      To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation. -- St. Augustine
    16. Re:about fscking time by neoform · · Score: 1

      that's a very bad way of looking at things since as it stands christians are imposing their ways upon those who who are not part of their belief system. If you want to believe in god, cool, do it. Just don't make people who don't have the same belief be forced to take part, while at the same time be 'patriotic'

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    17. Re:about fscking time by Ex-Parrot · · Score: 1
      That's where the different points of view I mentioned come in. I don't want to force anything on anybody, and I'm sure you don't want to force anything on anybody, either. The problem is that Christians see events like this as atheists forcing atheism on them, and atheists see it as Christians forcing their beliefs on them. Nobody intends to force anything on anybody, but they think of their own beliefs as "normal" and "right," and therefore they do exactly that unintentionally. That goes for both atheists and Christians.

      All of this is separate from my stance on the Pledge of Allegiance issue, of course. I still don't see a problem with removing the phrase "Under God" because that phrase itself was an edit of the original. This means that not only are we changing the Pledge back to its previous form, but also that there is already a precedent for modifying the Pledge.

      --
      To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation. -- St. Augustine
  16. Time will tell... by jbarr · · Score: 1
    From the article:
    The 9th Circuit is the most liberal and the most overturned appeals court in the country.
    If this is true, this could be overturned.
    --
    My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
    1. Re:Time will tell... by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      The 9th Circuit is the most liberal and the most overturned appeals court in the country.

      If this is true, this could be overturned.


      I don't know if it is the most, but it is pretty liberal and pretty frequently overturned. It also frequently reverses itself. In this case, however, it appears that they have sided fairly strongly with legal precedent set forth in the Supreme Court cases Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) and Lynch v. Donnelly (1984). As counter-intuitive as the decision may seem, it appears to be on fairly solid legal ground. All it would take to make the pledge constitutionally acceptable would be to remove the words "under god" which were added to it in 1954, so it should be an easy situation to remedy.

  17. Yikes. Just yikes. by tempest303 · · Score: 2

    I am so not looking forward to the bile-spitting, spittle-launching, uber-flamewars that this decision is going to spark online and in Real Life(TM).... it'll be like the whole abortion debate, only it'll be over something ultimately rather inconsequential.

    Oh well... let the flaming begin! I'll start it off with my own cynical take on it:

    Expect the 700 club, with Pat Robertson and all his "Christian" conservative pals start exclaiming that the Gov't is "repressing" religion, and that we've lost our "moral compass" or some other stupid shit.

    FLAME ON!

  18. FINALLY by DaBjork · · Score: 1

    As an athiest and a patriot I have been waiting for this for years! Think about it. What would the founding fathers think of us pledging that we will accept the impetus of government and deny our own right to rebel on a daily basis. In god we trust is the only thing left on the chopping block!

    1. Re:FINALLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, as a deist and a patriot, I think this is a bad call. Removing "under God" clearly endorses the Athiestic Religion.

    2. Re:FINALLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Christian, I really could care less what babble the nation declares as its "pledge of allegiance." Just cause they've been saying "under God" for the past 50 years doesn't make it true.

      You all worry that the US is becoming a Christian only nation. Don't. Its not. The US is about the least "Christian" nation it possibly COULD be.

      Yes, the "other side" won. Not today, not yesterday, but from the very beginning. It was a forgone conclusion. At least you're all being honest with yourselves now.

    3. Re:FINALLY by King_TJ · · Score: 2

      Well, actually - I suspect the founding fathers would have no real problem with the general idea of the pledge. After all, they put in quite a bit of effort to establish the form of government we still have today.

      They weren't anarchists... They weren't proposing that everyone rebel from governmnet on a daily basis. They simply envisioned putting a fair and just form of governmnet in place, that was as non-intrusive as possible.

      What they probably *would* be quite upset with is the way our legal system has twisted the meaning of parts of the Constitution in order to give government many additional powers it was never intended to have.

    4. Re:FINALLY by nkuitse · · Score: 1

      As an athiest and a patriot I have been waiting for this for years!

      As a fellow atheist who considers himself lucky to live in the great, flawed, wonderful, terrible United States of America (I need a better understanding of patriot before I'll claim to be one), I was excited as all get out at the ruling. Then quickly annoyed at some of the brainless comments I heard on TV (though a few others were brainful), especially by some of our elected representatives in Congress who are evidently much too cowardly to stand on principle and support the constitution in this case as they might well do in other cases. Not that I should have been surprised.

      BTW, CNN's banner on the ruling spelled "atheist" as "athiest", just as the poster I'm quoting did. I'm fine with alternative spellings among Slashdot readers -- the more, the merrier -- but on CNN it felt like a slap in the face. OTOH, they probably misspell things all the time (I usually ignore the obnoxious things so can't be sure); I guess that's some small, twisted kind of consolation.

      In god we trust is the only thing left on the chopping block!

      Well, maybe not the only thing, though IMO it should be the next to fall, but I'm not going to get my hopes up; I have a feeling today's ruling won't stand for long, let alone a hypothetical ruling against the blatant theism-promoting "In God we trust".

      With any luck, we will now see a bunch of public figures make fools out of themselves rushing to support the promotion of God by the State. Strike that: no luck will be required; it's a sure thing.

    5. Re:FINALLY by john82 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the founding fathers would have been appalled at such a ruling. Perhaps you forgot a portion of the Declaration of Independence:

      "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, ..."

      Did you know that two of the signers were clergymen (Lyman Hall and John Witherspoon)?

    6. Re:FINALLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My creator was the process of evolution, so this still applies. It isn't the "creator" I as an athiest have the problem with, it is the insistence that the "creator" is some fucking mythological sadist named "God".

    7. Re:FINALLY by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      Actually, the founding fathers would have been appalled at such a ruling. Perhaps you forgot a portion of the Declaration of Independence:

      "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, ..."


      I dunno about that. Creator could mean nature, the universe, the process of evolution, or parents. It's a far cry from proclaiming and endorsing a monotheistic view of the world.

    8. Re:FINALLY by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      As an athiest and a patriot I have been waiting for this for years! Think about it. What would the founding fathers think of us pledging that we will accept the impetus of government and deny our own right to rebel on a daily basis. In god we trust is the only thing left on the chopping block!

      As a fellow atheist and patriot (contrary to what ***king George the First claims), I was quite excited to learn of the ruling too. In addition to "In God We Trust", we also need to make sure that Ohio's state motto "With god all things are possible" gets the axe as well. Then we can really celebrate.

    9. Re:FINALLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just out of curiosity, maybe a little ignorance of history on my part, but wasn't the United States founded on these ideals?

      I'm not a devout -anything- other than I worship my bi-weekly paycheck, but wouldn't not being allowed to say those words (along with prayer) be infringing on the rights of those who wish to participate in such things?

    10. Re:FINALLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. They didn't say "our Creator" as if those who signed were of the same mind. Instead, they said, "their Creator" which brings the citizens individuality into the picture. "Their Creator" assumes each person is free to choose and follow their personal beliefs. "Their Creator" is, I think on purpose, very ambiguous.

  19. It's all over. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give the country back to the Indians, maybe they can do something with it.

    1. Re:It's all over. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, like return to the genocidal wars they were fighting with each other when we got here...

  20. Aren't there worse unconstitutional laws? by norweigiantroll · · Score: 1

    I seem to remember something about "Freedom of Speech" but now the DMCA makes it illegal to tell how to circumvent a copy-protection device.

    1. Re:Aren't there worse unconstitutional laws? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice troll! ya got me! Freedom of speech does not allow one to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theatre.

  21. don't panic by rhaig · · Score: 2

    This court is the most often overturned circuit court.

    Even if they aren't overturned, I see this to be similar to the Prayer in schools ruling some years ago.

    The 1954 addition of "Under God" will probably be removed if there any changes at all.

    Now, for the "In God We Trust" on the money... If a Suit is filed against that, then I respond by saying, the government isn't forcing you to use cash.

    --
    "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
    1. Re:don't panic by ichimunki · · Score: 1
      the government isn't forcing you to use cash

      Thank [insert deity, deities, or lack thereof] that you can now use the Number of the Beast for all your buying and selling needs. :)

      I can see the Supreme Court refusing to hear this appeal. Here is an interesting article about "In God We Trust"-- including a bit about the first case to oppose the motto (oddly finding this same circuit ruling in a much different direction).

      --
      I do not have a signature
    2. Re:don't panic by efernalReal · · Score: 1

      Actually, you are forced to ACCEPT cash as a payment form. That's what the phrase "This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private" means.

    3. Re:don't panic by rhaig · · Score: 2

      that's why the sign "We reserve the right to refuse service to Assholes like you" is hanginh on my wall.

      Not calling you an asshole, but just pointing out that you don't have to accept cash. you can just refuse to do business with a cashpayer.

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
    4. Re:don't panic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And *why* would you refuse to do business with someone paying cash? Cash doesn't leave a paper trail, so you're safe in not reporting it (within limits, of course) to the IRS. The government doesn't take your money to spend on [insert favorite pork, foreign aid to oppressive regimes, or bureaucrat's salary here].

    5. Re:don't panic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tax payers were forced to buy the mints :)

    6. Re:don't panic by rhaig · · Score: 2

      because you moron, I was making a counterpoint to the parent article that stated you HAVE to accept cash because it's "legal tender for all debts public and private"

      I keep forgetting... "By definition, half the population is below average intelligence."

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
    7. Re:don't panic by rhaig · · Score: 2

      so don't pay taxes.

      so you're going to ask... if I'm not supposed to report my income, and not use cash, what the hell am I supposed to do?

      Barter.

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
    8. Re:don't panic by Danse · · Score: 2

      If a Suit is filed against that, then I respond by saying, the government isn't forcing you to use cash.

      Doesn't matter. The government prints the money. Printing "In God We Trust" on the currency of the nation seems like an even more blatant violation of the establishment clause than the POA case.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  22. For any who are angry... by admiral2001 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    ... I ask you to consider a simple scenario. What if this gets repealed, then in 30-40 years, the major religion in the country changes to something else, like Islam. What if there would then be a successful lobby to change 'under God' and 'In God We Trust' to 'under Allah' and 'In Allah We Trust'. How would you react to that?
    (Feel free to substitute 'Islam' and 'Allah' with any appropriate pairing).

    I, for one, am completely for this ruling, speaking as a person who always felt uncomfortable mumbling those 2 words in grade school.

    1. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just nitpicking but "allah" simply means god in arabic. Christians in lebenon call god allah because they speak arabic..

      actually looking at current demographics you'd probably looking to change it to the spanish equiv in 50 years time.

    2. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Explain the difference between God and Allah. And what's your racial facination towards Islam btw? Are you a bigot too? People like you just make me sick, I feel we should round all of you, strip you all of your nationality, and lock you up in maxium security concentration camps till you submit to the will of God and till he forgives you and gives that to us in writing.

    3. Re:For any who are angry... by spotter · · Score: 2

      there are many sephardic jews who grew up in Muslim countries speaking Arabic that refer to God as "Allah". Just like Jews in english speaking countries use the word God. But for the same reason the phrase "under Allah" doesn't make sense, as you are mixing english and arabic.

    4. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Precisely!

      I grew up essentially as a Christian, and I suppose I still would be considered one. Though I firmly believe that every Hindu, Muslim, Jew, Atheist and Moonie I shared a classroom with as I grew up in the American public school system was being grossly misrepresented by the Pledge of Allegiance. Aren't they all Americans as well? The Constitution applies to them as well as it does any other Christian and America is just as much their home even though God is not their god.

      My Inlaws are all Indian and proud to be naturalized Americans. They came here to live better lives and build a solid future for their children. And they are not Christian, Catholic or otherwise. So since they don't believe in God, does this mean they cannot be proud Americans?

      If the Supreme Court bows to the ill focused Congressional pressure and over rules the 9th circuit, we all will know definitively that our Government doesn't give a damn about it's heritage and the priciples that this country was founded upon. All these people care about is getting their Congressional seat back and getting their PAC dollars.

    5. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woah there, why was this troll modded up? He's just a fucking racist and ignorant as well. 'Allah' means God in Arabic, nothing to it. And it's the same God that your Southern mother taught you about. Same God of Adam, Moses, Jesus etc etc...

      Just cause of a few fundamentalists, you hate the entire religion? That's insane dude, there is beauty in everthing, you need to stop being so ignorant.

    6. Re:For any who are angry... by sckeener · · Score: 2

      I'm all for pagans taking over....I'd love to say

      one nation 'under goddess'

      --
      "Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
    7. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um.. I think you are sadly mistaken. Or maybe you just said that to start some sort of flame war. But people like you just make me sick. You should leave America if you cant stand the diversity. You'r example here is not very insightful, nor is it very relevant, you could have come up with better examples that would not hurt the feelings of others reading what you wrote. Please be aware that you are not alone in this world. Or maybe you've never been in a diverse group, and so couldn't feel how it would be liked to pointed out in this way. I thin it's bad taste and you should stop giving these kind of examples, even if this one was an innocent mistake by you. I hope it is btw.

    8. Re:For any who are angry... by admiral2001 · · Score: 1
      For those few who are calling me a racist or a bigot because of my choice of using 'Islam' and 'Allah':


      I have no racial issues. I (unlike you) know that there's a difference between races and religions. However, as I said, you may substitue any other sensible pair, like 'Hindu' and 'Vishnu'. You are the ones who are acting unAmerican. My religious convictions (or lack thereof) are only taking the the veil of religion (that is covering your eyes) away.

    9. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about "One Nation Under Satan"? Now that would piss people off.

    10. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Muslims, the Pope, et al like to SAY that its the same God as what Christians, Jews, etc believe in when cross-religious unity. Its certainly NOT the case though. They are very different ideas of the godhood.

      For one, Christians believe in the Trinity, or more specifically, the godhead of Jesus.

      More than one Islamic scholar has equated this with polytheism and that the Christian church is pretty much at the same level as other "primative" religions because of this.

      Anyhow, MY God is not Allah, nor is Mohammed His prophet.

    11. Re:For any who are angry... by Balinares · · Score: 1

      Speaking of which... If you'd please inform someone who was living overseas at grade school age...

      Is the pledge mandatory? What happens if a kid doesn't wish to recite it? What if the parents don't want their kids to do it?

      That's probably a stupid question... But heck, I'd like to know.

      --

      -- B.
      This sig does in fact not have the property it claims not to have.
    12. Re:For any who are angry... by HiThere · · Score: 2

      I believe that the generic word for god is something more like illah, and that allah means "the god". Possibly illah is more like "a god", however.

      Anyway, it's because of this distinction that they have a prayer that goes something like:
      "La illah allah" Which I believe means approximately "our god is the god". (Somehow I hear a undertone of ... nevermind. That's certainly projection on my part.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    13. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another strawman, successfully crushed!

    14. Re:For any who are angry... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      I'm all for pagans taking over....I'd love to say
      one nation 'under goddess'
      The only problem is that she's a lesbian...
    15. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George Wallace dies and goes to heaven.
      The gates are locked and he starts banging on the gates
      St. Peter comes to the gate and says they are closed Mondays.
      George demands insists that because he is such a great man God should come and open the gate for him personally.
      St. Peter explains that this is not such a good idea.
      George demands to know why?
      St. Peter explains, "first of George, she is black..."

    16. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the truth ALWAYS makes people mad.

    17. Re:For any who are angry... by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Any ruling to overturn the (much overturned) 9th circuit *must* be because of outside pressure and not because the 9th circuit is populated by a bunch of nutballs who refuse to do their job and judge instead of legislating from the bench.

      Yeah. Right.

    18. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was growing up, the class would have to stand up and recite the pledge verbatim. As an athiest, I would always get a little weird tingle when we got to the "under god" part...

      But yes, we were supposed to say it.

      Then again, I kinda remember a version passed around that went something like

      I pledge a legion
      to the united snakes of paprika
      and to the repubic
      for which it sits,
      two nations, under bob
      invisible
      with liver and justice for none.

      crazy kids.

    19. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the law. They MUST
      The punishment varies from state to state.

    20. Re:For any who are angry... by Tosta+Dojen · · Score: 2
      Not a stupid question at all. The answers are...no, and nothing. Critics will argue that the kids who do not participate will 'feel bad' or something like that, but participation is entirely voluntary.

      In fact, Jehovah's Witnesses (in general) do not recite the pledge, because they object to the idea of pledging to a secular government. Pretty much the opposite of the current objection. Some think the gov't is being too religious, others that it is too secular.

      Now, the big question is: If we are offending both groups, which one do we cater to?

      --

      I have a strong belief in the Second Amendment.

    21. Re:For any who are angry... by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      And i think trolls like you need to be put out of _our_ misery. Or are you just too stupid to understand the point of the post?

      How does this example hurt the feelings of anyone? Does it hurt the poor WASPs' feelings to imply that Islam is just as valid a religion as Chistianity?

      Or does it hurt them to think that in a few more decades they might not be in the majority anymore?

      Or maybe you think the Muslims are the ones being hurt? Not being Muslim i can't say for sure, but i'm fairly certain that after 9/11 no Muslim living in America is unaware that there are a great number of ethnocetric WASPs who don't give a damn about other cultures other than to assign labels and blame to them. I doubt they'd mind being used in an example to point out to those people the nature of their own hypocrisy. I certainly wouldn't mind being used as an example myself if i could think of a reasonable one involving athiests.

      Clearly the original poster has no problem with diversity, it's the others who think that the idea of a god, in particular the quasi-monotheistic WASP God, should be promoted in public schools who only want diversity as long as it's just like them.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    22. Re:For any who are angry... by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Now, the big question is: If we are offending both groups, which one do we cater to?

      MINE! :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    23. Re:For any who are angry... by reactor · · Score: 1

      I don't quite agree with this argument. The word "Allah" simply means God. Certainly, it implies Islam, but that is merely a cultural difference, not a religous one. Cultural differences aside, "Allah" no more suggests Islam than "God" suggests Christianity. The simple phrase "Under God" could be applied to almost any major religion and doesn't really suggest any particular religion or ideology. The only reason people think of Christianity is because that IS the prevelant religion.

    24. Re:For any who are angry... by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      Not a stupid question at all. The answers are...no, and nothing. Critics will argue that the kids who do not participate will 'feel bad' or something like that, but participation is entirely voluntary.

      Not true. There are some states that mandate the recitation of the pledge. Even in states that don't, many school districts do. And even if your state or school district makes it optional, what happens if your son's first grade teacher decides that your son is a trouble maker and gives him detention because he doesn't want to recite the pledge, or wants to recite it without the "under god" line, or in some other way deviates from what that teacher thinks he should do? I know, it sounds ridiculously far-fetched, but then again having an assistant principal checking girls underwear at a high school dance (in the presence of a police officer no less!) to make sure that they weren't wearing thongs sounded ridiculously far-fetched to me a month ago. (That's a cached Goodle page, BTW.)

    25. Re:For any who are angry... by Viewsonic · · Score: 1

      All *is* god. It's not a singular term for Christians or Catholics.. It's a singular term .. a god is a god. Be it Zeus, Aethena, Allah, or whatever other weirdo someone might worship. It doesn't even need to mean that God is "male" .. God can be the universe for all the atheists. Its a dummy term to trust what YOU believe in.

    26. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The simple phrase "Under God" could be applied to almost any major religion ..."

      except Hinduism or Buddhism, two of the largest religions in the world.

    27. Re:For any who are angry... by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      Point of order. The past tense of shit is "shat", as in "Shatner"

      (trekkers, put down the phasers... please? :) )

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    28. Re:For any who are angry... by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      Actually, in many cases kids who do not participate will be _made_ to feel bad by peers who are offspring of fundies. Children can be cruel to those that are different to them. Events like Columbine indicate it might be best that we dont' give them any more opportunities to excercise that trait than necessary...

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    29. Re:For any who are angry... by sinserve · · Score: 2

      Good for you :-)

      "illah" means a god.
      "Allah" is derived from "Al-Lah" and means "The God".

      There is also "Rab", which means lord, and "Rabbi" which means
      "my lord" [this is not the samething as the Jewish rabbi, that one means "priest",
      roughly, I don't know much about jewish culture.]

      Btw, everyone who thinks muslims worship a different god than christians and
      jews, is dead wrong. I was raised as a muslim, and we were taught about the
      three "heavenly faiths". It basically says that you are going to heaven, if
      you believe in God and follow one of the three books. The books are Torat,
      Bible and Quran. However, they are not downwardly compatible. A jew is required
      to convert to Christianity or Islam, if he learns of either, becuase the prophets
      Jessus and Mohamed came after Mosses.
      A Christian would still go to heaven, as long as he has never learnt Islam, however,
      the moment he learns Islam for what it is, he is required to convert to Islam. A
      christian can not convert to judaism, because heaven is not upward compatible with
      previous kernels (too many patches I figure.)

      A muslim OTOH, doesn't need to convert to anything, and he is not expected to anticipate
      the arrival of another prophet, for Mohamed was the last. Hmmm, so technically, a muslim like myself would consider himself "bleeding edge" ;-D

      There other minor differences between the 3 groups also. A muslim man can marry a woman of
      either faith, but a woman can't. A muslim can perform his prayer in a Church or a Synuguge.
      A muslim can eat from a Jewish plate without having to ask what it is, but NOT from a christian
      plate. A muslim can not address a christian or a jew, while he is on his horse (figuratively speaking I guess)
      he has to come down and address them from ground level.

      All other people are said to be going to hell. Hindus, Buddhists, Taoists, all peacful skinny
      environment friendly morally fancy shemancys are going to hell .. en mase.
      OK, I really don't wanna accuse my faith (which I don't know well btw) of any wrong doing,
      from what I know, all non-God believers are considered evil [this includes other christians who
      believe in "prophets" after Mohamed, including mormons, and any other christian faction that
      idolizes a human being, so if your church has a holly saint you pray to, other than God himself,
      chances are you are considered an infidel under Islam.]

    30. Re:For any who are angry... by feed_me_cereal · · Score: 2

      He's not saying anything bad about islam, he's just playing on public opinion. His point is that most people in america wouldn't be to happy about "In Allah We Trust" because, to them, the word "Allah" means the islamic god, and they don't want to be represented by it since they don't believe in it. So Allah means god in arabic, big deal, thats irrelevant because that's not how it would be pervieced by most americans. My handle when playing wolfensiten is usually "Allah" and I continually get kicked of of servers for using it. He's just drawing a paralell to the current situation. Maybe you're to dense to notice that.

      --
      "Question with boldness even the existence of a god." - Thomas Jefferson
    31. Re:For any who are angry... by brendandonhue · · Score: 1

      God is a part of multiple religions, unlike "In Allah We Trust" which singles out Islam as the "National Religion". Although,a country supporting a single religion may make sense in say, The Holy Land.

    32. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bravo. If Christians were to actually sit down learn about Islam instead of relying on secondhand information that was probably miss interpreted (or rumorized...new word run with it) we wouldn't have all these idiots in here saying Allah is a moon god.

    33. Re:For any who are angry... by n-baxley · · Score: 2

      I believe that God is a much more generic term than Allah. I'm not up on my Islam, but Isn't Allah the name of the Islam God? The word God does not have anything distinctly Christian about it when compared to other religions. To Islamics God is Allah, to the Jews it is Yawhe, to Christians, it is a tri-un God made up of God the father, Jesus and the Holy Spirit.

    34. Re:For any who are angry... by Shade,+The · · Score: 2

      > The only problem is that she's a lesbian...

      Why is that a problem?

    35. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may claim participation is voluntary, but when we were visiting (went to school in the US for 6 months), my mother had to complain like a bitch to make the school realise that I shouldn't have to pledge anything.

      I did stand up, because there's no reason to be openly disrespectful, but I was ALLOWED to not say the words, after the ruckus my mother made.

      Best quote I heard... "How can anyone here consider themselves free when they're forced to do something every day?"

    36. Re:For any who are angry... by kenneth_martens · · Score: 2

      What if there would then be a successful lobby to change 'under God' and 'In God We Trust' to 'under Allah' and 'In Allah We Trust'.

      Actually, since "Allah" literally means "God", lobbying to change "God" to "Allah" would be pointless. "God" is a multi-purpose term. As far as I know, there isn't any deity in any religion named "God". (After all, what does God need with a name? There's only one of Him.)

    37. Re:For any who are angry... by Shade,+The · · Score: 2

      Um, that seems to be stretching the definition of "One nation under God" a mite too far.

    38. Re:For any who are angry... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      > The only problem is that she's a lesbian...
      Why is that a problem?
      Of course, it's not if you're a lesbian, too...
    39. Re:For any who are angry... by ipfwadm · · Score: 2

      There's only one of Him.

      I thought there were 3? Daddy, Junior, and Spook. Errr, I mean the father, son, and the holy ghost.

      (For the humor impaired, it's a joke)

    40. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just cuz you feel uncomfortable we have to make every effort to make you feel better you shallow prick! Get some freaking balls and take control of you life. What are you going to do in the future if you can't get over the fact?

    41. Re:For any who are angry... by mpe · · Score: 2

      The simple phrase "Under God" could be applied to almost any major religion

      Only to monotheistic religions

      and doesn't really suggest any particular religion or ideology.

      It implies monotheism, which certainly excludes the polytheistic Hindu faith.

    42. Re:For any who are angry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just a thought for future reference: trolling is neither productive, funny nor even particularly disruptive in threads like these where even the serious posters sound like trolls.

      RWM!

    43. Re:For any who are angry... by ShmuelP · · Score: 1

      There is also "Rab", which means lord, and "Rabbi" which means "my lord" [this is not the samething as the Jewish rabbi, that one means "priest", roughly, I don't know much about jewish culture.]

      As a Jew (who happens to know some Arabic), Arabic "Rabbi" is the same root as Hebrew "Rabbi", which literally means "my lord", just like the Arabic, but is almost exclusively used to refer to Jewish clerics. A priest is a "kohain" (other English forms include "cohen", "kohen", "kahn", etc).

      --
      Solution to blink tags: wrap them in another blink tag, with a javascript delay loop, so they cancel each other out
  23. Good. by MisterBlister · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Actually I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.

    The separation of church and state is one thing (which I agree with)...But the whole concept of the pledge of allegiance smacks of propaganda and indoctrination.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm no commie-hippe-whatever. Hell, I don't even use Linux... But forcing kids to pledge their allegiance to flag/country/god/whatever every day just smacks of so much wrongness. Let these ideas stand on their own merits, not be points of indoctrination.

    And lastly, I think if anything a forced pledge of allegiance is self-harming in that, due to having to say it each day kids view it as some form of rote punishment. The words behind the pledge are lost because they learn to recite them like robots long before they can really understand the implications of the words. Why do this?

    1. Re:Good. by tshak · · Score: 2

      I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.

      Although I normally stood up in class as respect, after Junior High I rarely if ever pledged allegiance to the flag. I think it's a speratist and nationalistic attitude that is wrong. Sure, I personally hope our nation is under God, but that is not for a room of kids to be forced to recite. My Dad always backed me up if there was a problem with me abstaining from "pledging my allegiance".

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    2. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm talking about things like civil rights -- due process, free speech, etc.

      We don't have any of that stuff anymore. Don't you read slashdot.org??

    3. Re:Good. by PastaQueen · · Score: 1
      I think if anything a forced pledge of allegiance is self-harming in that, due to having to say it each day kids view it as some form of rote punishment.

      Word. In my middle school we not only had to stand and say the pledge, we also had to listen to the national anthem everyday during homeroom. They'd switch the tape every so often and there was nothing as hideous as the Whitney Houston version. "Oh saaaaaaaaaaeeeeeaaaaay can yoooooooooooouuuuu seeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaeeeee..." It was first period by the time she was done. It was traumatic enough to make me never once stand for the pledge during high school when it was optional.
    4. Re:Good. by Monkelectric · · Score: 2
      I have a better idea ...I havent been in school in, almost 10 years now, but, they should let the kids decide individually to participate in the pledge on the days they are proud to be an american.

      Sept 11, I was pround to be an american ... when the pres declares he can jail whoever he wants, FBI blows chunks, Enron colapses ... I'm ashamed.

      And thats really the problem nowadays ... so much more to be ashamed of then proud of

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    5. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Beyond the phrasing issue, I don't think we should try to install patriotism by forcing people to recite a paragraph over and over again.

      I would much prefer that our citizens be educated in what's good about America..."


      Perhaps we can educate you about the fact that we, as United States Citizens do are not forced to recite the pledge of allegiance.

      Ever.

    6. Re:Good. by Monkeyman334 · · Score: 1

      I admit I come from a pretty liberal part of the country, but I went a few years never saying the pledge of allegiance and never once had anyone say anything about it. Sure, they are going to do it daily, but you may refuse.

    7. Re:Good. by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      Actually I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.

      Exactly. Added to your other points (which I have not quoted here), it is not uncommon for citizens of foreign countries to attend US schools. Why should a Swedish exchange student (like a good friend of mine) be forced to pledge allegiance to the US government? More to the point, why should a US citizen be forced to pledge allegiance to the US government? I'm a US citizen and there are many things that our government does that I don't agree with. I shouldn't have to blindly agree to give the government my undying loyalty if I'm not taking a public office or entering the military.

    8. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyone is forced to recite it. At my public high school, you may sit down quietly while others recite it.

    9. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol. i recited the pledge of allegiance
      many times in school. it meant nothing
      to me. maybe it was because words like
      "liberty and justice" were too abstract
      for me then. i didn't believe in god
      and the words "under god" meant nothing
      to me also. (i still dont believe in god)

      regardless, i went on to risk my life for
      my country and was honorably discharged.
      i guess my question is this: why the fuck
      do we force our kids to say this?

    10. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without agreeing or disagreeing with anything else you say, I don't think any kind consider the pledge as rote punishment. The types of kids who might say that are probably happy about the 45 seconds they don't have to pay attention in class.

    11. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But forcing kids to pledge their allegiance to flag/country/god/whatever every day just smacks of so much wrongness. Let these ideas stand on their own merits, not be points of indoctrination. "

      Same thing can be said about mathematics, physics etc ..

    12. Re:Good. by Brian_Ellenberger · · Score: 2

      >Actually I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with. You haven't been forced to say the Pledge since 1943. See West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943) (USSC+)

    13. Re:Good. by BitterOak · · Score: 2
      Actually I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.

      It has been. It was noted in the decision that for some time now, the pledge of allegiance is voluntary. This court, however, took rather astonishing step that declares that simply being around other students who are reciting the pledge implies that you are somehow "protesting" by not reciting it, and this puts undue pressure on students to conform by reciting it.

      Although I disagree strongly with that analysis, they are, I think taking their cue from the Supreme Court which used similary reasoning in banning voluntary prayer in public schools, another decision I disagree with.

      I do however agree with all who believe that no student in a public school should be forced to recite any pledge or prayer, if for no other reason than the fact that pledges really become meaningless when they are coerced.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    14. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      blahblahblah...Enron colapses ... I'm ashamed

      Let's not forget about Worldcom. Hahahaha!

    15. Re:Good. by borzwazie · · Score: 2

      It is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court ruled a while ago (during WWII) that it was unconstitutional to require anyone to say it.

      --

      "We apologize for the inconvenience."

    16. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and that is precisely the point. The fact those who do not believe in god, or who question god's existence in any way, must remove or disengage themselves from the proceedings of the state (thru the school) is unconstitutional.

    17. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      &gt Don't get me wrong, I'm no commie-hippe-whatever. Hell, I don't even use Linux...

      Looks like we've got you outnumbered!
      Walk away !!!!

    18. Re:Good. by medscaper · · Score: 1

      Here's a question. Though I agree with what you're saying, you pretty much defeat your argument entirely in the last sentence..."...which those things represent."

      So, you're saying that the flag, the anthem, and the name all stand for something.

      Now, going to great lengths to educate everyone about WHY they're important as symbols and what they DO stand for is completely important, but doing away with them is difficult, and at an age when children are most impressionable, teaching them a name or a picture of the flag is much easier than trying to teach them the values it represents, and just as valuable...

      IMHO.

      --
      Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
    19. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think we should try to install patriotism by forcing people to recite a paragraph over and over again.

      Damn right. The correct way to install patriotism is to unpack the tarball and follow the instructions in the README or INSTALL files.

    20. Re:Good. by fireant · · Score: 1
      Wow, I wish I would have known that I didn't have to say the pledge when I was in elementary school.

      Once (only once) I stood up for the pledge, but I didn't say anything... the teacher made me get up in front of the class and say it. I guess she didn't get the memo.

      I hated saying it from then on.

    21. Re:Good. by CmdrSam · · Score: 1

      >Although I disagree strongly with that analysis, they are, I think taking their cue from the
      >Supreme Court which used similary reasoning in banning voluntary prayer in public schools,
      >another decision I disagree with.

      Prayer is not and never has been banned. Prayer lead by school officials or that otherwise has the weight of authority behind it (even student-led prayer at, say, a mandatory assembly or graduation) is not allowed. I hope you can see the difference...

      At my high school, student-led group prayers at the flagpole before or after school were common -- but they weren't on school time and they didn't have any sense of being an official school activity.

      --Sam L-L

    22. Re:Good. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Added to your other points (which I have not quoted here), it is not uncommon for citizens of foreign countries to attend US schools. Why should a Swedish exchange student (like a good friend of mine) be forced to pledge allegiance to the US government?

      It's not as if the Swedish government would expect pledges of allegiance from US citizens who happened to be on their territory.

      More to the point, why should a US citizen be forced to pledge allegiance to the US government? I'm a US citizen and there are many things that our government does that I don't agree with. I shouldn't have to blindly agree to give the government my undying loyalty if I'm not taking a public office or entering the military.

      It's also the "wrong way around", it would make more sense for the US government (or at least government officials) to pledge allegiance to the US people.
      Doubt the people who originally wrote the US constitution would have any time for such an idea. Their position appeared to be something along the line that governments are like fire, good servant, poor master.

    23. Re:Good. by haa...jesus+christ · · Score: 1

      I'm no commie-hippe-whatever. Hell, I don't even use Linux

      I don't know about the rest of you, but the linux remark made my day.

      That having been said, very insightful stuff, kudos to you.

      And my thougt on all this? Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.

    24. Re:Good. by WoodsDweller · · Score: 1
      • Actually I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.
      Indeed. The time would be better spent if children were required to repeat "Association does not prove causation."
      --
      There are two kinds of societies: sustainable and doomed.
    25. Re:Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even when I was in first grade, I knew what the words meant, and I saw in the news and in the behavior of almost every adult I interacted with that the words were meaningless. There was no liberty. There was no justice. And there certainly was no God, enforcer of All That Is Good: how could there be, when what I had to put up with was actually worse than the Biblical descriptions of Hell yet I was still living on Earth?

      I never once actually said the pledge. Ever. And I don't think my teachers ever noticed my silence. If I ever have kids (I'd first want to make a world I could feel good about bringing children into), I would let them know that standing up to all these bad people is a good thing, and that I, for one, would be proud of them, no matter how much it hurt.

  24. Thats awesome by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I really really hate the pledge. I'm glad something was done about this.

    "One nation under God"...ehhh gag me. And since when has the US actually lived up to "liberty and justice for all?"

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
    1. Re:Thats awesome by clustersnarf · · Score: 1

      A mac user. go figure...

      Hell yes this is flamebait!

    2. Re:Thats awesome by john82 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Score: -1 Troll

      Since when is a blatant "hook-line-and-sinker" troll rate a 3?

    3. Re:Thats awesome by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      I am shocked that this got a Score 3.

      You want to be gagged because of One Nation Under God...

      You are absolutely pathetic. For the love of God go live in another country. How about somewhere in the middle east. Or how about Africa or China. You obviously haven't fought in any wars for this country and have no concept of what other people did for you to spout off stupid comments like that and live. What do you think would happen to you if you lived in China and wrote negative things about their government? Hmmm...

      Where do you think we get our laws from? Do we just make them up. Do you think that we make laws just to allow people to live together? If that was the case then I could have 5 wives and torture animals on the side, have web sites of other sick an perverted things. Why can't I do that? Because it isn't moral.

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
    4. Re:Thats awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, "for the love of God go live in a another country".

      This country was founded by at least one known devil-worshipper (Benjamin Franklin, through his satanic connections he was able to establish a relationship with FRANCE), and two other weird guys. THere was no GOD in the founding of our country. In fact, it can easily be said that Thomas Jefferson was an anarchist, although that point is open for debate. FREEDOM is what this country was founded upon, NOT CHRISTIANITY.

      In fact, if you read your 10 commandments closely, followed by Moses' law, and later followed by Jesus inventing what is now commonly referred to as the Microsoft Tax when he dismissed moses' law, you will learn that christianity and freedom have absolutely nothing to do with each other.

      Hail Satan!

      Dave

    5. Re:Thats awesome by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      Yeah, that's right, you tell him. How dare he try and exercise his freedoms and rights as a citizen! People didn't die to defend his right to exercise constitutional rights!

    6. Re:Thats awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "One nation under God"...ehhh gag me. And since when has the US actually lived up to "liberty and justice for all?"


      We do pretty well with those two. The author want to put in "equality" but was advised that it would be politically incorrect.


      As for "under God," well unless you're an atheist, "God" is pretty generic. Zeus, etc. were "gods" The difference here is monotheism, many, including myself, can only conclude that "Allah", and "God" are one in the same. God told Isreal that His name was "I am." You can't get more general than that.

    7. Re:Thats awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh boy.
      You are so funny. Too bad you do not realize it yourself

    8. Re:Thats awesome by FatherOfONe · · Score: 1

      I did not say that he shouldn't exercise his freedoms. If his ideas are so different than what the core beliefs of what this country is founded on, then I suggested he go somewhere else.

      Also to comment on all the other people that want to point out that Thomas Jefferson was a bit weird and a Devil worshiper, I say if he truely believed what you say then his acts wouldn't have been what they were. He probably wouldn't have said "So help me God" as many times as he did...

      Again I ask you,
      what are laws based off of?

      If you answer that honestly, then you will sooner or later get around to God and morality.

      As was a common saying in WWI; "There are no atheist in fox holes"

      --
      The more I learn about science, the more my faith in God increases.
  25. The 2 emails I sent to CNN... by macemoneta · · Score: 2

    1- I agree that the term "under God" should be removed from the pledge. The pledge was valid before 1954, and it will continue to be valid after the current ruling. Our country was founded on the principle of religious freedom, and that includes the freedom to abstain from religious belief. In order to insure that freedom, our founding fathers had the foresight to include the separation of church and state into our constitution. The reference to a deity on the pledge implies the need to believe in a god, in order to assert allegiance to our country. That was not and should not be the intent of pledge.

    2- The point that many of those complaining about this judgment are missing is that this is not about religious belief vs. atheists. There are many, many religions in this world and in this country. Some do not believe in a deity, and some do not believe in a single deity. The pledge statement "under god" excludes not only atheists as some believe (still wrong), but many non-Judeo- Christian religions as well. Many people forget that their personal beliefs are not the beliefs of all, and imposing those beliefs on others is wrong. This is why we have separation of church and state.

    --

    Can You Say Linux? I Knew That You Could.

    1. Re:The 2 emails I sent to CNN... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you see this as being about religious belief versus atheists, that points to the fact that this is a religious issue. This means the government cannot require anything one way or the other. What's the difference between the pledge and prayer?

      Atheists are a part of this country too. They have the same rights as anyone else in this country, in spite of what the president says.

      How hard is this to understand:
      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

      After 48 years of ignoring the first ammendment, seems like this decision has been a long time coming. The recitiation of the pledge is un-American. Why do people feel the government should continue indoctinating children?

      I suppose the problem is that many religious focus on converting people of different faiths, so they see "free exercise" of religion as the right to impose their beliefs on as many people as possible. This practice has no place in our schools. Leave the kids out of it!

      The phrase "under God" was added to the Pledge of Allegiance on June 14, 1954 (during the rise of Communism).

      No clergyman attended the U.S. Constitutional Convention, and the Constitution itself contains no religious references, not even a mention of God.

      Bush: "No, I don't know that Atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God."

      Apparently President Bush has been well indoctrinated. I doubt he even realizes when his learned bigotry started.

      This all points to why this circuit court decisions is a good thing.

  26. my $ is unconstitutional. by schmuckie · · Score: 1

    clearly unconstitutional because my washingtons say "IN GOD WE TRUST"

    1. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by frovingslosh · · Score: 2
      Do what I do, take a bold black Sharpie marker and black it out from each bill you get. They still spend just fine after they are corrected.

      By the way, this is a recent change to our cash, I have several older bills without the offending phrase on them.

      --
      I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
    2. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might think you are making a joke, but you are dead on. Having that printed on US currency IS state endorsement or recommendation of a particular religion, which is prohibited by the constitution.

      It doesnt matter wether you are forced to use cash or not (as a previous poster mentioned). Its still a prohibited endorsement.

      Its about time someone points these things out.

    3. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only does your money say "In God We Trust" it isn't even a United States Note. Congress as contracted with a private bank, the Federal Reserve, to issue the money for the United States. This clearly violates the establishment in the Constitution that only Congress can coin money and regulate its value. Additionally moving our currency from the Gold and Silver standard has made each state that accepts the Federal Reserve Note as legal tender violate the Constitution's establishment that only gold and silver shall be legal tender for the various states.

      Oh well, not like the government really cares about the Constitution and our rights anymore anyway.

      Be careful what you say our you may be labeled anb "enemy combataint"

    4. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Pray tell, what is the name of the particular religion and who is the head of that religion?

    5. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Islam? Headed by Alah? I always thought deep down inside the US was an Islamic Nation. I don't want your 2 cents I want a bloody quarter.

    6. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF are you talking about? Back your claims...perhaps with a link to information pertaining to your claims.

    7. Re:my $ is unconstitutional. by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Nice guess but wrong.

  27. Not from around here, are ya? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Hell, I don't even use Linux


    This of course begs the question: what the hell are you doing on /.???

    1. Re:Not from around here, are ya? by PD · · Score: 2

      Obviously he doesn't have long hair himself, but he thinks that long hair looks good on everyone else.

  28. Atheists are worse then Fundies by jsimon12 · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    Newdow acknowledged that his daughter was not required to say the pledge in school. But he claimed in court documents her rights were violated when she was compelled to "watch and listen as her state-employed teacher in her state-run school leads her classmates in a ritual proclaiming that there is a God, and that our's [sic] is 'one nation under God.' "

    I am sorry but atheists really freaking piss me off sometimes. All they ever want to talk about is how they "Don't belive in God" and "Don't push your religion on me". Damn it, they are worse then Fundies. This guy should have just told his daughter that she didn't have to say it and go on with life, but instead he has taken something sacred to the majority of the people in the country and pissed all over it. Oh well, whats next, American Flag bog rolls?

    1. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by simetra · · Score: 2

      YEAH. When they put the word God on the flag, Einstein.

      --

      "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
    2. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by elmegil · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This guy should have just told his daughter that she didn't have to say it and go on with life

      Because we all know how easy it is in grade school & high school to do something that clearly makes you stand out (like refusing to stand and recite the pledge). Especially in the current atmosphere of you must be patriotic or you are a terrorist.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    3. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pledge allegiance to the flag, of the United States of America, and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under Allah, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

    4. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For some of us, reciting "under God" is like pissing on the Constitution. And those of you who get pissed when someone actually tries to enforce the rights that are guaranteed by the US Constititution really piss us off.

    5. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by jmv · · Score: 2

      With separation of state and religion, the "In God We Trust" has no reason to be there. Or why not have "In no God We Trust" or "In GodS We Trust"?

    6. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by MrDog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can understand you being angry, but the real issue is whether the US ought to support/establish a particular religious belief. The Pledge clearly does. I am a Christian, but I still think that as far as the constitution goes, this is a no-brainer. What could the defense possibly be?

    7. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by NiGHTSFTP · · Score: 1

      Why not look at the other side of the coin for a change.

      Right-wing-ultra-wackos tend to like to spew on about how religion, so don't get me started on that.

      And all christians want to talk about is how "abortion is killing a life" and "stem cell research is a tool of THE DEVIL!".

      One time I saw a news report about stem cell research, and they caught people coming out of their local Roman Catholic Church. One clueless-looking woman said something to the effect of "I dont think its right to be researching stem cells." Made me fucking angry. Oh well, whats next, reinstitution of leech therapy?

      Mod this waay down.

      By the way: FUCK OFF. Dont go all pussy and say "freaking", the word is fuck.

      --
      http://www.angryburrito.com/ The best, completely unfinished software review site ever.
    8. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The words "In God We Trust" are on the dollar bill because from time to time we like to tell comforting lies in order to disguise our own moral bankruptcy.

      Yeah, we're a real God-loving and trusting nation. Hahahahahaha.

      Tell me another one.

    9. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by RevRigel · · Score: 2

      In a way, it might be better for the development of character amongst the young people of the country if they had more things on which they had to take a stand of principle, even if it's unconstitutional. I always just never said the pledge, or sang the anthem.

    10. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm... Wouldn't you think forcing every public school in California to change its schedule is going to make this fellow's daughter "stand out" more than just about anything she could have possibly done (without killing anyone)?

    11. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      Especially in the current atmosphere of you must be patriotic

      You say that like it's a bad thing. There are plenty of other countries in the world where the ingrates who hate America can go live. Maybe while they're there, they'll gain an appreciation for the things that motivate the patriot...assuming that they don't end up killed or locked up in jail first.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    12. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Glenn2372 · · Score: 1

      Because we all know how easy it is in grade school & high school to do something that clearly makes you stand out (like refusing to stand and recite the pledge).

      Yeah, kind of like when you stand out for not wanting to participate in sex before marriage or smoking pot.

      I am actually for the Pledge as it is, but this previous post pisses me off even more. Let's teach our children that while yes, it's actually difficult to stand up for what you believe in when it's not the majority, it's still the way to go. At the rate we are going, our kids are going to become the most confused kids of all time not because of one believe or another, but simply because they don't have a belief period. We as a people are ruining what ever semblance our children have of any convictions!

    13. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      The defense is that it is not particular to one religion, that it promotes belief over unbelief, a permissible action, if not sectarian. Do muslims believe that a state should be under God? Yes. How about religious jews or christians? yep again. If you're not promoting one religion over the other, it's constitutionally kosher.

      If not, I want 200 years of refunds for the chaplains salaries that never should have been authorized for the House/Senate/SC.

    14. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by V_drive · · Score: 1

      If the phrase, "under God" makes you feel like the constitution is violated, how do you feel about the Declaration of Independance which states, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights?"

      Here's a highly unpopular opinion, but I'll toss it out there for what it's worth (probably very little)...

      The United States is based upon upon a certain set of very general moral beliefs. We are created equal. We are free to hold our opinions and to publish them. We are free to conduct business. We are free to elect our leaders.

      These freedoms are based, according to the Declaration of Independence, upon the notion that God (however you define him) made people with rights. The laws of the United States are based upon a moral sense which is given authority by something greater than ourselves.

      This ever-present greater authority, expressing it's will upon our nation by the moral sense created in us, is summed up as the word, "God," in the Pledge and on our money. It is also referenced in countless presidential speaches given over the generations and in stone memorials and government buildings all over our nation. For an example, see a transcript of President Lincoln's second inaugural address (thanks to google, here it is: http://showcase.netins.net/web/creative/lincoln/sp eeches/inaug2.htm)

      To most Americans, what I've just described is a foreign concept. The landscape of the nation has changed quite a bit. Whether it be for better or worse is not a topic I'm going to touch here.

      I believe it is wrong for any court to cite the constitution as forbidding the Pledge words, "under God." In order to agree with their logic, you must believe that today's court has better understanding of the constitution than those who drafted and signed it. This court decision is a reflection of current American opinion, which is different from the founders', and nothing more.

      --
      char *mySig;
    15. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hitler had principle. Principle as is defined in todays world is overrated! Principle now equates to a collection opinions and we all know how much those are worth. No, what todays children need is good parenting (with or without religion).

    16. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by elmegil · · Score: 1
      The good thing about patriotism is when it is voluntary, it's heartfelt and honest. I have nothing but respect for such patriots.

      As opposed to every idiot and her brother shredding flags on their radio antennae, because it's the thing to do. And disrespectful to the flag to boot.

      My point is that enforced patriotism leads to tyranny. Or weren't you paying attention during WWII?

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    17. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by elmegil · · Score: 2
      Yeah, kind of like when you stand out for not wanting to participate in sex before marriage or smoking pot.

      Um....no.

      The teacher doesn't fornicate at the front of the class every day. The principal doesn't lead mass dope smoking sessions. There's peer pressure, and then there's adult sanctioned and enforced peer pressure. We're not talking about the former.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    18. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by MrDog · · Score: 1

      It is certainly establishing some form of monotheism as the ruling force of government, and a form of monotheism that most closely resembles Judeo/Christian/Muslim theology. This leaves those outside this realm, especially those who claim no religious belief, as feeling excluded from the political whole. This is *not* constitutionally kosher. How is promoting belief over unbelief a defense? What are the governmental benefits to establishing a particular belief system, especially weighed against *not* promoting those beliefs? The state should not promote *any* religious theology.

      Your point about chaplain salaries is an interesting one.

    19. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by scotch · · Score: 2
      The declaration of independence has no legal authority in the United States. The constitution, on the other hand ....

      The declaration of independence is an interesting document from a historical perspective, but has not one bit of authority or relevance with the operation of the US government.

      The idea that the constitution is a living document, and must be interpreted is built into the constitution. The people that wrote it are dead - what they would have thought has no legal authority either. They are not the supreme law of the land: the constitution is.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    20. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by You'reAFuckingMoron · · Score: 1

      As opposed to every idiot and her brother shredding flags on their radio antennae, because it's the thing to do.

      What the fuck are people thinking when they do that? I've even seen a lot of morons running around with the penant from their favorite football team sticking out of one window, and the US flag sticking out of another, both at the same height.

      Yeah! I love America just as much as (but no more than) I love these 12 talented athletes who wouldn't know me from adam. What the fuck kind of nimrod advertises that his allegience to his country is of the same quality as his allegiance to a god damned sports team?

      --
      What a fabulous troll your post was.... or how fabulously stupid you are. It's impossible to tell.
    21. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by brad3378 · · Score: 2

      &gt ...Especially in the current atmosphere of you must be patriotic or you are a terrorist

      True, but I doubt the guy would have had the balls to do this back in late september. I still think he's pressing his luck.

      --

    22. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by V_drive · · Score: 1

      I did not intend to imply that the Declaration of Independence had any legal bearing. The notion that "revoking" it makes us part of England was merely a joke which I placed in a different post from this more serious one.

      In this post, I referenced the Declaration of Independence as evidence that the founding fathers would not have objected to referencing God in the Pledge. As you said, they're all dead now.

      What I'm refuting is not the notion that "under God" should be removed from the Pledge. I am refuting the notion that the words of the constitution clearly dictate it that it should be removed. To believe that the constitution clearly separates church and state to such an extent that "under God" should be removed from the constitution is simply incorrect. It is only popular current interpretation which wants it removed.

      To me, this seems a clear point. However, popular opinion seems to be that it is incredibly obvious that the constitution forbids these words. I'm just saying it isn't so obvious. If fact, the constitution could very well be (and, for most of American history, was) interpreted to allow such things. The constitution was also interpreted to allow slavery so I'm not about to necessarily favor old interpretation over new.

      Remember, the person to whom I was replying stated that saying the nation is "under God" is like "pissing on the Constitution."

      Something I really find strange in all this is that, as a child, I never even thought of that "under God" as being a religious reference. I always thought it was a figurative way of saying that no other nation or governing body has control over the United States. I don't mean to make a point of that that; I just find that interpretation interesting

      Besides all of that, scotch, I would like to say that I appreciated your messages. They were much more calm and lacking of profane flaming than I usually find around here. I am thinking to myself about to what degree the constitution can be interpreted and changed one generation to the next. Since I'm undecided on the subject, I've tried not to give an opinion on whether or not those words should or should not be removed. What I am sure about, as I've already stated many times, is that the constitution does not necessarily mandate one or the other.

      --
      char *mySig;
    23. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The teacher doesn't fornicate at the front of the class every day. principal doesn't lead mass dope smoking sessions.

      So in other words, the teacher should keep public fornication down to a weekly or even biweekly even, and the principal's blunt training should be one-on-one.

    24. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      The secular benefits of marriage (a religious act) are so well understood that it's also become a state act as well as a religious one. Social stability and lower criminality are general secular benefits of religious expression. This is why it's ok to promote belief over unbelief, it promotes the general social good. This is also why official US prayers (and we've had plenty) are all as generic/non-sectarian as possible. Promoting a particular religion is verboten, generic support of religion is not. And by the way, I've had Hindus explain their theology in the sense that there is a heirarchy of gods with the most enlightened understanding that they are all faces of one God though he chooses to split and present different aspects so you've got no problems from christians, jews, muslims, and hindus *at least* to the under God construction. Buddhists are free to mentally translate it as a flawed expression of Nirvana, nobody else will mind, etc.

    25. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      As opposed to every idiot and her brother shredding flags on their radio antennae, because it's the thing to do. And disrespectful to the flag to boot.

      Can't argue with that. I think most of them mean well, but there's a woeful lack of knowledge about how the flag should be displayed. (Between the Boy Scouts and Air Force JROTC, I think I picked up a fairly decent grasp on the matter. It's not something that either organization spent a substantial amount of time covering, either, because there's not that much to the Flag Code.)

      Most of that seems to have fallen by the wayside as we've gotten further away from 9/11. While it's nice that people aren't "shredding flags on their radio antennae," it is somewhat disappointing that we didn't see more of a long-term change in people's attitudes and priorities.

      My point is that enforced patriotism leads to tyranny.

      I don't know if patriotism is something that can be "enforced." However, I don't think it's unreasonable to question why somebody would choose to live in a country that he hates. (I'm still waiting for Barbra Streisand and Alec Baldwin to leave the country, like they said they would.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    26. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by IcePop456 · · Score: 1

      What ever happened to just standing there? When growing up, some days I said it, other days I didn't. There is nothing wrong with standing and saluting a flag. It stands for our country. We live in a free society. You're free to leave if you don't like it....

    27. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by shadowbearer · · Score: 1

      " The secular benefits of marriage (a religious act) are so well understood that it's also become a state act as well as a religious one. Social stability and lower criminality are general secular benefits of religious expression"

      Oh, that certainly explains why the divorce rate in the US is so high.

      /sarcasm

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
    28. Re:Atheists are worse then Fundies by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      What I'm refuting is not the notion that "under God" should be removed from the Pledge. I am refuting the notion that the words of the constitution clearly dictate it that it should be removed.

      What others have refered to so far is that the first amendment bars Congress entirely from passing any law establishing religion. Putting the Judeo-Christian "under God" into the Pledge of Allegiance (especially for the express purpose of advancing that religion) clearly goes against that amendment.

      Something I really find strange in all this is that, as a child, I never even thought of that "under God" as being a religious reference. I always thought it was a figurative way of saying that no other nation or governing body has control over the United States.

      That's what happens when children are required to pledge oaths, but no one explains to them what they mean. You have an interesting interpretation, but the lawmakers of the 50's certainly disagree with you. The intention was to reinforce the Judeo-Christian belief and attack atheism. Those are actions that are clearly banned by the Constitution. The government has absolutely no say in which religion is valid or 'true.'

  29. Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 4, Insightful
    As an atheist myself, I always felt uncomfortable with The Pledge. I still find a mandatory recitation of it too close to the 2 Minutes of Hate (or whatever), but just in the other extreme.

    My 7-year-old daughter, who attends public school in Utah, is always coming home with little sayings and tidbits about Jesus and god. I haven't jumped on the school or her teacher just yet, but I may if it continues.

    Thers's nothing wrong with religion, in terms of personal choice. However, children are too young to contemplate the philosophical and metaphysical consequences of a religiouos faith. Hell, even many seemingly intelligent adults can't give a good reason for their faith (or for their denouncement of my lack of it).

    I wish religious followers would leave children alone and let informed adults come to them when they reach an age appropraite to do so.

    1. Re:Excellent by Random+Feature · · Score: 2

      Then talk to your children rationally about it. Children can be extremely logical if you sit down and calmly discuss the situation.

      Besides, you're in Utah - what did you expect? It's one of the last places where no matter what you think, the Mormons win.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    2. Re:Excellent by whovian · · Score: 2

      I wish religious followers would leave children alone and let informed adults come to them when they reach an age appropraite to do so.

      While I personally agree with this sentiment, I also know people who were raised "without religion" and have come to feel a certain degree of exclusion by society in their adult lives due to society's general christian-ness.

      So, here's a question: Is there religion without society? I think so. Emily Dickinson says it nicely: "Some keep the Sabbath going to Church // I keep it, staying at Home"

      --
      To-do List: Receive telemarketing call during a tornado warning. Check.
    3. Re:Excellent by sdjunky · · Score: 1

      "My 7-year-old daughter, who attends public school in Utah, is always coming home with little sayings and tidbits about Jesus and god..."

      And somebody's 14 year old son/daughter keeps seeing people bringing court cases against tidbits about Jesus, God, Allah, Buddha etc. Now that 14 year old is feeling uncomfortable.

      People... there are other people who feel uncomfortable when people are talking about low down scumbags in washington.... so should we not allow that. Should children be forbidden from speaking about congressmen?

      I understand people being uncomfortable with a public school system paid for with taxpayer dollars but people who hold those beliefs ALSO pay taxpayer dollars and the right to talk about those things is protected under Free Speech.

      People get upset because God is talked about in public school and say "Freedom of Religion and the right to not believe" and then get upset when a schoolboard decides that "Lord of the Flies" should not be freely available to the very same children by saying "Freedom of speech".

      I understand the points. I believe in God. Others don't. According to the religion I practice I know God as one who says "Tell people, but let people use their Free will to decide". But banning the practice of religion is just the same as banning speech and other fundamental rights

    4. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to overgeneralize your statement into (by current standards) ridiculousness. Of course, if you really DO agree, I kindly invite you to go take a flying leap.

      ** Hmm... Sounds like you'd like to take all children away at an early age away from their parents and foster care them in the state, in order to prevent "early religious indoctrination before they've come to the age of rationality."

      Believe you me, I'm about the most passive Christian there is, by doctrine. If you as the state ordered that Christians no longer had the right to work, I would bear it. If you ordered us locked up in camps with guard towers and riflemen, I'd bear it. If you tried to take our children away from us in order to "reindoctrinate" them, I'd fight you tooth and nail to my dying breath.

    5. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still find a mandatory recitation of it too close to the 2 Minutes of Hate (or whatever), but just in the other extreme

      Why don't you just not say the phrase 'under God' ? Seems like a pretty simply fix to me.

      Hell, even many seemingly intelligent adults can't give a good reason for their faith

      You must be agnostic, a true atheist wouldn't say Hell ;)

    6. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course this would be the teacher telling your child about God and not a fellow classmate. You assume too much.

    7. Re:Excellent by VValdo · · Score: 2


      I understand the points. I believe in God. Others don't. According to the religion I practice I know God as one who says "Tell people, but let people use their Free will to decide". But banning the practice of religion is just the same as banning speech and other fundamental rights


      Banning the practice of religion is one thing. Compelling an American child to swear their allegance to a nation "under God" is another.

      --
      -------------------
      This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    8. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2
      I still find a mandatory recitation of it too close to the 2 Minutes of Hate (or whatever), but just in the other extreme.

      Why don't you just not say the phrase 'under God' ? Seems like a pretty simply fix to me.

      This was not referring to the religious aspect, but more of the patriotic conditioning. School is a place to learn the facts, not be indoctrinated.

    9. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2

      I assumed nothing. I was told by my daughter that it was her teacher who stated these things.

    10. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2
      People... there are other people who feel uncomfortable when people are talking about low down scumbags in washington.... so should we not allow that. Should children be forbidden from speaking about congressmen?

      It's not the discomfort -- it's the time and place.

      When I dine with friends and family, I bow my head at the meal's prayer (out of repsect for the househole, not for religious reasons). I'm still uncomfortable, but it's not my place to tell people not to say grace at their table.

      However, school is not the place for religious or patriotic indoctrination. School is for learning.

    11. Re:Excellent by NiGHTSFTP · · Score: 1

      (coming from a 16 year old's perspective, so bear with me)

      Lol, just put it bluntly to her.

      "God isn't real"

      And if you really want to make classmates/teacher/everyone crazy.

      "Santa isn't, either."

      Maybe its just me, but even 2nd graders seem to be prietty smart, when they arent being fooled into saying things by Bill Cosby on one of his low-rated TV shows.

      --
      http://www.angryburrito.com/ The best, completely unfinished software review site ever.
    12. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2
      People get upset because God is talked about in public school and say "Freedom of Religion and the right to not believe" and then get upset when a schoolboard decides that "Lord of the Flies" should not be freely available to the very same children by saying "Freedom of speech".

      I'm talking about teachers stating as fact their religious beliefs during school hours. That's not cool by me.

      If like-minded folk want to use time before/after school hours to discuss matters of faith, fine by me -- even if a teacher leads the meeting. But when a 1st grade teacher states matter-of-factly "Jesus loves you" to her class during class hours, that's just not appropriate.

      I don't object to the beliefs of others, just their poor judgement on when and where they should express them. Would you appreciate me going to your religious gatherings and stating my atheist views as fact to you (assuming they weren't solicited)?

    13. Re:Excellent by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 3, Funny
      As an atheist myself, I always felt uncomfortable with The Pledge.
      Use Mr Clean, then.
    14. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please explain the difference, and realize that no matter what arguement you use, current philosophical thought about "fact" and "science" will say you're wrong.

    15. Re:Excellent by Dirtside · · Score: 2

      There's an appropriately pithy saying, by some famous humanist or atheist of the past, but I don't remember who:

      "Everyone's born an atheist."

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    16. Re:Excellent by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Banning the practice of religion is one thing. Compelling an American child to swear their allegance to a nation "under God" is another.
      "Freedom OF religion" also means "freedom FROM religion".
    17. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2
      Hmm... Sounds like you'd like to take all children away at an early age away from their parents and foster care them in the state, in order to prevent "early religious indoctrination before they've come to the age of rationality."

      Kindly get a grip. I simply stated that children aren't capable of grasping religion, and should wait until a more mature age to be introduced to it. Parents are free to teach their kids most anything, within reason.

      Kids shouldn't consume as much junk food as they do, yet most parents feed all kind of garbage to their children. Most people indoctrinate their children into religion, often to the point where later in life they can't make a rational appraisal of their own faith. Some people instill hate (KKK, etc.) into their kids.

      Should the State come in and take the kids to avoid these things? I don't believe so. However, parents should not be so selfish as to think they're not harming their kids (and, by extension, future society) in some way for doing these things.

      In summary, consenting adults are free to take on any ideals they wish (within reason -- my nose, your punch, yadda...). Pushing potentially harmful ideals on a young child is morally wrong.

    18. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I wish religious followers would leave children alone and let informed adults come to them when they reach an age appropraite to do so.


      Amen


      I have allways felt that religin should be rated NC-17, especially with all the down right disgusting stuff in certain relegious texts.

    19. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I told my children (when they got old enough) that people who believe in god are like their friends who still believe in santa claus and the easter bunny. They aren't BAD people per-se (although their morals are usually quite skewed), and they will try to convince you that their personal easter bunny, called "God" really exists, but you should just say "no thank you" to them and move on.

    20. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that to NOT teach children religion is still teaching them... That religion is unimportant/not necessary to them/a simple matter of what makes you feel good.

      Its already pretty obvious that you think religion is "harmful" (after all, look at your comparitive example: junk food) so I wish you'd stop pretending otherwise. ("potentially harmful", heh. "selfish", heh.)

    21. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still find a mandatory recitation of it too close to the 2 Minutes of Hate (or whatever), but just in the other extreme.

      Actually the article on cnn says the under god part was added during the cold war becuase we where facing off against athiestic communists and that if they could reinforce the "god is on america's side" kind of sentiments in school children it would aid the war effort.

    22. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody's talking about banning the practice of religeon or forbidding kids from talking about it.

    23. Re:Excellent by jafac · · Score: 2

      I wish religious followers would leave children alone and let informed adults come to them when they reach an age appropraite to do so

      That's a TERRIBLE idea.

      Which "informed" adults?

      From which church?
      Or which organization? (the Bureau of Logic and Truth?)
      With what biases?
      Armed with what information?
      With what to gain by the person's conversion to whatever "faith" he or she decides on?

      Assuming you mean, atheists being the "informed" adult - informed about what exactly? About the cold, hard, fact that God does not exist? Surely you don't believe that that "fact" has been proven, do you? It's as logically shaky as the absolute faith in the "fact" that God does exist.

      Add to that, that religion, more often than not, is more of a cultural element, and that there's a reason people mostly tend to choose the same religion their family belongs to (because those are the people they know, relate to, and live with, and sharing a culture makes it easier to know, relate to, and live with people) - it makes much more sense to continue the age old tradition of parental indoctrination for those who wish it.

      If you want to impose a state "religion" or "pholosophy" or "world-view" - certainly, shield people from any thoughts of this nature until they're 18, then send in the "thought police" to tell them about the Truth of Existence.

      Or maybe a bit of wisdom from the Bible: Jesus said to come to the Father with a mind as like a child - maybe it's not that children are too young to contemplate the philosophical and metaphysical consequences of a religious faith. Maybe it's that adults are too old.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    24. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish religious followers would leave children alone and let informed adults come to them when they reach an age appropriate to do so.

      Personally I don't see a father raising his child in a religious manner to be any different than him raising his kid to be a hockey fan. In both cases the father is just doing what's normal to him; that is he's passing his culture on to his son as he, in turn, probably learned from his father. That's just how culture works. We pass on our system of beliefs (be it hockey, religion or whatever) to our children because we have an innate desire to make our offspring more like us. In turn our kids learn our traits because they also have that same desire to be like their parents.

      So is that father brainwashing his kid? I mean how could the child possibly understand the complexity of God? Well, he understands God exactly how he understands the thrill of a penalty shot. He just accepts both as a truth because he trusts his parent. Like it or not, a good deal of our behavior is learned without any rhyme or reason as to why.

      So is it wrong to teach your kids Christianity? Well, is it wrong to teach them to like the Pittsburgh Penguins? After all, by your stance it would appear that both of these things are of equal significance. Neither will effect your final destination, neither will be of any true benefit to you in life. In fact they both exist only to make us feel better about ourselves. I mean its not like if your child suddenly becomes a Christian her soul becomes doomed to Hell. You apparently don't even believe in Hell. So, what's the issue?

      Personally, I think you simply don't like other people's cultures being pushed on you. Who does? However, it's a fact of life that people will always force their culture on another group. It's just the way things work and we're all guilty of it. The man that brought this case to court? He's pushing his ideals. And even you, you're teaching your daughter your own personal belief system.

      It's a perfectly normal thing to do.

    25. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2
      Yes, anything is "potentially harmful". Religious followers who hold extreme views are far more common than other extreme views.

      Me to my daughter: The Mormons believe that Joseph Smith found... yadda-yadda-yadda. They believe that you can only go to heaven (or that planet) if you're baptised. Etc.

      My Mormon mother-in-law to my daughter: Joseph Smith found... yadda-yadda-yadda. You will go to hell is you're not baptised. A woman's place is in the home, subordinate to her husband, and she must overpopulate the earth with children."

      I'm being sarcastic in my paraphrasing of my mother-in-law. However, you see the difference between stating the simple facts about a belief and pushing your views on a unprepared child. My daughter doesn't watch much TV (by design), yet she somehow has this notion that she must marry and crank out offspring. This is a direct result of her grandmother's teachings. I ask you, is it right to tell a little girl that her worth as a person is lessened if she doesn't marry and have kids?

      I'm atheist, but I could give a hoot if my children (after being protected from institutionalized brainwashing) decide to join a religious group after they become legal adults. I believe I am right in my belief, but I'm not so arrogant and "selfish" to push my belief on my kids as fact. It's their choice to make when they're capable.

      Religion is fine as a personal belief, but as an institution, it's dangerous. Recruiting young ones in hopes of gaining future tithing income to fatten tax-free coffers is sickening.

    26. Re:Excellent by Deagol · · Score: 2
      Don't be an ass.

      We don't let kids smoke before a certain age. We don't let kids marry, drive, drink, have sex, etc. before a certain age (or at least most of us prefer they don't).

      There's a reason for this: kids aren't ready for certain things.

      I hold that religion is one of those things that a child's mind cannot handle.

      I won't push my atheist beliefs on my kids. It will get an equal explanation to other religions. My child may decide to follow her father's footsteps blindly, but I certainly hope that she'll choose a path later in life which is based on her own reasoning (doesn't even need to be logical) and not because some person or group pushed it on her.

    27. Re:Excellent by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      "Freedom OF religion" also means "freedom FROM religion"

      How do you figure?

    28. Re:Excellent by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      "Freedom OF religion" also means "freedom FROM religion"
      How do you figure?
      Fucking jesus lord shit christ fuck almighty!!! I can't believe I have to explain that on Slashdot!!! You must be fuckingly brain-damaged by your fucking religion to ask such a question. You must be a morm^hon, are you?

      Well, lemme explain, morm^hon. If you're allowed to believe whatever pea-brain crap you want, you ought to be allowed NOT to believe it, no?

      Let's say I like to masturbate. I really like handling my dick, fantasizing about the turn-on du jour (today, it's blue and yellow spandex), geting it (the dick, not the spandex) hard, then vigorously stroking it until it ejaculates some sperm. Sometimes, whenever I masturbate in the shower, I also shove a finger up my asshole, and fondle my prostate from behind - presto, instant super-orgasm. Of course, this is prohibited by many religions. However, I do not see anything wrong with that.

      Likewise, right now, it is summer. So I can't be bothered to wear clothing, even when I go in the park to sunbathe. Of course, this is also prohibited by many religions, and, like the above, I do not see anything wrong with that.

      So, tellme, you fuckhead, why does your restrictive view (that's only due to some retardation in your brain) should be binding on ME???

      Your freedom to believe whatever shit you want doesn't mean you have to force your beliefs on others. What if I FORCED you to masturbate three times a day (like I do on a good day), or have a walk in the park naked? You would be pissed-off, no? Well, that's exactly how I feel when you tell me I should not masturbate or sunbathe naked in the park.

    29. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude! You're in Utah... what were you expecting?

      Besides, most religious zeolots consider themselves more informed than everyone else and believe that the appropriate age is prenatal.

    30. Re:Excellent by Jake96 · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be such a hard policy. If a kid comes to a teacher / parent with a question along the lines of, 'what is religion?', the response could be something like, 'there are many, so-and-so is mine, here's an overview of several belief systems.' Modified of course for age-appropriateness.

      Your point that the vast majority of the world population grows up with the faith of its family and immediate community was one of the big reasons I began to question the validity of my local favorite's claim to be the 'one true religion.' Surely, I thought, every religion makes this claim in its stronghold, and they cannot all be right. Is the eternal reward in the afterlife reserved for those who happen to grow up in just the right family and community? I think we'd all be happier and more rational beings if we came to our faiths, or none at all, individually and not because that's what mom and dad believed.

    31. Re:Excellent by John+Harrison · · Score: 2
      You will go to hell is(sic) you're not baptised.

      Are you sure that she says that? If so, she doesn't have a very deep understanding of her own religion. She would be more likely to say, "You won't go the Celestial Kingdom if you are not baptised. You also need to..."

      What do you think the "Mormon" concept of hell is?

      I appreciate your problems with your mother-in-law. Have you discussed this issue with your wife? Have you considered moving to another state? Please don't take this the wrong way, but you seem to be putting a lot of blame on her.

    32. Re:Excellent by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Wow. I've never provoked a response like that. Almost makes me wish I'd been trolling.

      While your commentary is doubtless colorful, I think we're talking about two different senses of the phrase "freedom from religion." Essentially, you're saying that you have the freedom to create your own religion which is composed of copious amounts of autoerotic stimulation. Under the constitution, you seem to be quite free to do that. However, I would still classify that as freedom "of" religion. You've chosen a religion, it just happens to be different than what most people think of as "religious."

      The main sense in which I've heard the phrase "freedom from religion" used, however, is to say that people have a right not to be exposed to any religious symbology, references, etc, whatsoever. Essentially, religion has no place in public life. With this sentiment, I must wholeheartedly disagree. Freedom "from" religion flies smack in the face of the second half of the establishment clause - "prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      I'm not forcing you to do anything, I just want the freedom to worship as I see fit.

    33. Re:Excellent by VValdo · · Score: 2

      The main sense in which I've heard the phrase "freedom from religion" used, however, is to say that people have a right not to be exposed to any religious symbology, references, etc, whatsoever. Essentially, religion has no place in public life. With this sentiment, I must wholeheartedly disagree. Freedom "from" religion flies smack in the face of the second half of the establishment clause - "prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      Again, I'll say-- no one is advocating religion be eliminated from public life. The point is that government should treat all religions and the lack of any religion equally.

      By including "under god" in the pledge and compelling children to join in it and take this pledge, the government is, in effect, taking a side in the religious discourse.

      Look at it this way-- would it be acceptible to replace "under god" with "under NO god"? Would you feel comfortable having your children swear to "one nation, under no god, indivisible"? Would such a line be appropriate?

      If you can articulate why it would be wrong for the government to include this phrase, you might see the point. Because the difference between "under god" and "under no god" involves the judgement of which is religiously or spiritually correct and incorrect, and that's not a discussion the government should be advocating one way or the other.

      (I don't quite understand the example two levels up either)

      W

      --
      -------------------
      This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    34. Re:Excellent by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Oh. Sorry, I thought you were a religious butthead.

      However, you seem to be unable to grasp that someone might actually be WITHOUT religion.

      I am; I'm not only totally atheistic/agnostic/unpatriotic/whatever, but I don't need a religion to make myself my own morals.

      When I day freedom from religion I mean that I should not be FORCED to act/talk/think according to a solely religious dictum. I don't mean not being exposed to religion at all, I mean not being forced to endure it.

    35. Re:Excellent by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Again, I'll say-- no one is advocating religion be eliminated from public life. The point is that government should treat all religions and the lack of any religion equally.

      Thank you. That was my primary point in asking the first question, that government treating religions equally does not mean religion must be removed from public life.

      would it be acceptible to replace "under god" with "under NO god"?

      Well stated, and a point that is often lost on dear friends of mine. I've often mentally juxtaposed myself to an Islamic country and wondered how I would feel there when there is discussion on these issues.

      So I think we agree - I won't make you pray, and you won't stop me from praying.

    36. Re:Excellent by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Well, if we started debating theology, you might consider me a religious butthead. (I believe God wrote the Bible, the manuscripts are infallible, Jesus was God in the flesh, Jesus is the only way to salvation, all roads do not lead to God, God created the universe (though not necessarily in six days - jurys's still out), miracles still happen, etc.)

      I would posit, though, that your statment of a lack of religion is in itself a religious statement. For starters, are you an atheist or an agnostic? An atheist explicitly believes there is no god; an agnostic simply doesn't know. And, an apathetic agnostic doesn't know and doesn't care. :)

      Perhaps the discussion would better be framed in terms of "worldview." A significant part of your perspective on the world is influenced by that fact that you believe that there is no God (I'm going to go with the atheist definition above). The statement that there is no God is a faith statement with presumably some evidence of some sort behind it. You cannot conclusively prove that there is no God, and I cannot conclusively prove that there is a God. Hence, we are both left in the realm of faith.

      I'm glad you agree with my statement about the second sense of freedom "from" religion. I won't force you to act/think/talk from a religion, and I hope you won't keep me from exercising mine.

    37. Re:Excellent by 0x20 · · Score: 1

      I won't make you pray, and you won't stop me from praying.

      Well hello, that's what this whole thing is about. One, you nor the government has the right to induce children to say "one nation under God" every morning: "I won't make you pray." Two, there is provided a "moment of silence" during which children are allowed to engage in silent prayer: "you won't stop me from praying." Seems fair to me.

    38. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite agree. In the UK manipulation and endorsement of religion by god-squadding teachers is endemic. All it took was for me to suggest to my children that they should think hard about the evidence for anything before accepting it (not just religion). Five years later without any further discussions they have all independently arrived at the conclusion that there clearly is no god, supreme being, or whatever as there's no valid evidence at all to support such a concept. I hasten to add that all three are (currently!) well adjusted, delightful, good natured children as well, so a lack of belief in a god hasn't hurt them one bit. Kids are intelligent if you give them a chance, but like adults, they must be free to make their own choices where possible, and indoctrination of any type in any area should be discouraged.

    39. Re:Excellent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and I wish those who ARN'T religious followers would leave children alonge and let informed adults come to them when they reach an age appropraite to do so.

    40. Re:Excellent by jakew · · Score: 1

      If you are an atheist as you say, then you believe that there isn't a God. That's a religion, as valid as any other. You can't prove your belief, but you're willing to take it on faith.

    41. Re:Excellent by BarefootClown · · Score: 2

      Banning the practice of religion is one thing. Compelling an American child to swear their allegance to a nation "under God" is another.

      In case you hadn't noticed, the compulsion has already been forbidden. In 1943, the Supreme Court decided in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette that students could not be compelled to say the pledge. Quoting from that opinion, "[s]uch a statutory exaction is a form of test oath, and the test oath has always been abhorrent in the United States." So for the past 49 years, it has been unconstitutional for the State to require anybody to recite the pledge of allegiance. This decision goes further--this decision restricts the rights of those people who do wish to say it. That's a whole different matter.

      Unlike your average slashdotter, I actually read the court's opinion. In the opinion, the Court recognizes that "Newdow does not allege that his daughter's teacher or school district requires his daughter to participate in reciting the Pledge [page 4]." They also mention that Dr. Newdow went off the deep end, asking to court to order both President Clinton and the Congress to change the wording, actions which are well outside the jurisdiction of the court (page 6). He named as defendants the Southern California Unified School District, again a breach of jurisdiction, as his daughter is not enrolled there. Dr. Newdow has a history of making such challenges: in 2000, he sued President Bush over his inauguration, seeking to enjoin him from making any reference to religion in the future. When the suit was thrown out, "[i]n a last-ditch effort to salvage the suit, Newdow sought to add as a defendant Sen. Mitch McConnell, chairman of the congressional committee in charge of the 2000 inaugural. At a hearing before the magistrate, Newdow suggested the committee could be ordered to ban clergy from the guest list or not let them speak [Denny Walsh, The Sacramento Bee." He also filed a lawsuit against then-President Clinton, Congress, and the Broward County School District for the same reason, and attempted to continue the suit even after his daughter was no longer a student in that district. That case, as well, was thrown out.

      In spite of the plaintiff's whiny nature, though, there is at least a glimmer of validity to his claim. The wording alone is innocuous enough, similar to "In God We Trust," but the history of the Pledge reveals more. The Pledge originally had no reference to God; the reference was added by an act of Congress in 1954. To quote Neal Boortz:

      What was the big threat in 1954? Godless Communism, that's what. Democratic Congressman Louis C. Rabaut from Michigan was the House sponsor of the bill which added "under God" to our Pledge. Rabaut testified before a congressional committee in support of the legislation. He said "the children of our land, in the daily recitation of the pledge in school, will be daily impressed with a true understanding of our way of life and its origins.
      ...
      Rabaut wasn't the only person who indicated a religious purpose to the 1954 legislation. We also have the words of the President of the United States in 1954, Dwight Eisenhower. When he signed the legislation he said "From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our nation and our people to the Almighty."
      --Neal Boortz, 27 Jun 2002

      The phrase "under God" is innocent enough on it's own, but in context, it really does smack of State-endorsed religion. I should qualify that remark by mentioning that I myself believe in God; I am merely stating that I can understand the case made by Dr. Newdow.

      Realistically, I expect the decision to be overturned on appeal to the Supreme Court; they have already held that the phrasing is not unconstitutional in a similar case from Chicago (don't remember, about to go to lunch, don't want to look it up). He may have won his day this time, but public opinion, government opinion (Bush, and 99 senators, condemned the decision), and court opinion (the Chicago case) all seem to be against him. It will make an interesting case, to be sure.

      Incidentally, the Supreme Court decided two other interesting cases today. Previously, random drug testing had been held to be legal only for student athletes; the case they decided today opened that up to students in any extra-curricular activities. The plaintiff in this case was in a the school chorus, and on an academic quiz team. She tested negative, but sued over what she called a "humiliating and accusatory policy FOXNews.com." Schools do not need to have any just cause for testing students. In the second case, the Court upheld the idea of school vouchers for parochial schools, striking a blow in favor of school choice advocates everywhere. Expect to hear a lot of rhetoric about this one.

      --

      "Make it ten--I am only a poor corrupt official."
      --Captain Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Casablanca

    42. Re:Excellent by tutal · · Score: 1

      Cry me a fucking river. I don't agree with you and frankly I don't give a damn. Just because there is a disagreement, even in a song, anthem, or pledge, doesn't mean you have to get you pants in a bunch and make everyone else change because you are uncomfortable. Also the problem with saying that making a religious choice has no matter, is bullshit. To those of us who are religious, that belief has eternal consequences. And frankly to say that those who are religious are illogical or beleving blindly is ludicrous.

    43. Re:Excellent by VValdo · · Score: 2

      I did read the judgement and I know about the 1943 decision. When I said "compelling" children, I was referring to social pressure to conform, not literally forcing them to say it-- children are given the choice to either conform or protest, which is an inappropriate and difficult position to put a child into.

      The phrase "under God" is innocent enough on it's own, but in context, it really does smack of State-endorsed religion. I should qualify that remark by mentioning that I myself believe in God; I am merely stating that I can understand the case made by Dr. Newdow.

      Then we're in total agreement.

      To those who disagree with this ruling, I only ask if you think it would be appropriate to officially add "without god" to the pledge, and if you would be comfortable simply choosing to not participate in a classroom recitation of this pledge.

      If not, what is the reason the government includes one phrase and not the other, if it is not to affirm a religious position?

      W

      --
      -------------------
      This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    44. Re:Excellent by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      Damn! Someone's trying to burn off some karma!

      On the other hand, if I had mod points, I'd probably moderate up as being funny.

  30. instead of 'under God'... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how about we change it to "...under the respective monotheistic deity or polytheistic deities if that belief is appropriate under the tenets of the professed religion, or under goodwill towards the US if the freedom granted under the Constiution's Establishment Clause is so executed in not choosing to profess faith in any of the world's religions..."

    1. Re:instead of 'under God'... by Jouster · · Score: 1

      Yes, but it'd be terrible if we had to change corresponding parts to contain ninety-five syllables, too. Otherwise, the meter would be all off....

      Jouster

  31. Most likely will be overturned by joncue · · Score: 2, Informative

    The ruling was not put forth by the entire court, just by a three judge panel, with one of the panel members noting that the supreme court already found the pledge constitutional. The government will most likely ask that the entire court hear the case, where, according to NPR, the panel will probably be overturned.

    1. Re:Most likely will be overturned by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      The ruling was not put forth by the entire court, just by a three judge panel, with one of the panel members noting that the supreme court already found the pledge constitutional.

      I'd definitely like to see your source on that last part. After having read Judge Fernandez's dissenting opinion I can say that I saw no such reference to the Supreme Court ruling that the pledge as it stands is constitutional. Furthermore, if the SCOTUS had in fact actually made such a ruling in the past there's very little chance that the case would have even gotten as far as it had, let alone been overturned in such a manner.

    2. Re:Most likely will be overturned by joncue · · Score: 1

      The source of this was "All Things Considered", the afternoon news program on NPR. I can't remember who the comentator was.

    3. Re:Most likely will be overturned by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      The source of this was "All Things Considered", the afternoon news program on NPR. I can't remember who the comentator was.

      OK, here's my source:

      http://news.findlaw.com/cnn/docs/conlaw/newdowus62 602opn.pdf

  32. i HATE when people phrase it that way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It really drives me crazy when people approach the public debate on this particular subject this way.

    Now, think about it: What do you think when you read the words "Pledge of Allegiance Rulled Unconstitutional"? When *i* read those words, i assume that we're discussing the pledge of allegiance being declared illegal somehow, that it violates the constitution.

    But the pledge of allegiance hasn't been ruled unconstitutional. It's been ruled unconstitutional for schools to push the pledge of allegience on people.

    Likewise, when a local texas court ruled that the school couldn't have people say prayers over the school sound system before school football games, all the papers reported this as "Prayers at school football games banned" and all the alarmists went around yelling "Prayer at schools has been banned! Oh no!". But it hadn't been banned, it was just that the courts said the government couldn't endorse religion that way. Church youth groups could still go and stand around the flagpole and pray, and religious-themed student groups could still form and reserve rooms and such. But because public discourse had twisted it such that it seemed people were actually being prohibhited from doing something, everyone went around bitching about how unfair this was.

    It's enough to make you think that the people writing the headlines had somehow specifically phrased it that way so skimmers would walk away with a misconception of what had happened, and that people would go into the debate with some kind of subliminal bias against what the court had done, and the skimmers will have some kind of subliminal idea that the Constitution is some document that "bans" people from doing things, rather than clearly demarcating symbolic areas of control the government has no authority to enter. Hm.

    Saying a school administrator must do something a certain way is not "banning" anything, or trampling on anyone's rights. It is telling a state employee how to do their job. Why can't we discuss it that way?

    Why can't we have the headline be something like "Pledge of allegience ruled unconstitutional for schools"?

    1. Re:i HATE when people phrase it that way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the pledge of allegiance hasn't been ruled unconstitutional. It's been ruled unconstitutional for schools to push the pledge of allegience on people.

      Naughty, Naughty, you didn't do your reading did you?

      to qoute CNN:

      in its ruling, the court said, "The Pledge, as currently codified, is an impermissible government endorsement of religion."

      This means the pledge itself is unconstitutional, everywhere, not just in schools.

      Next time read first before you waste all that time writing a misguided rant. Thanks.

    2. Re:i HATE when people phrase it that way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh.

      My point was, saying "the pledge is unconstitutional" seems to be implying the pledge is somehow illegal. The pledge is not being declared unconstitutional. Its governmental endorsement&pushing is being declared unconstitutional. You can still say it. It's just if you're a government employee, you can't incorporate it into your job. But it isn't somehow being banned.

      I assumed that the fact there is no difference between a school employee and any other government official was so nonexistent i didn't even need to bring it up. I am sorry, i honestly just had no clue you or anyone else would take that the way you parsed it.

      Like i said: there is a difference between banning something publicly and telling a government official how they can do their job. The difference is tiny but when taken in repeatedly and subconsiously makes a tremendous difference in how people view it. How many newspaper opinions columns do you think tomorrow will have people trumpeting "this is infringing on my rights as a citizen to say the Pledge"? Do you think people will realize, wait, he can still say the pledge anytime and anywhere he wants? Or they'll go "yeah, those damn circuit courts, why'd they declare the pledge unconstitutional"? just a thought.

  33. Possibly a shocker but no real surprise by donutz · · Score: 2

    What with kids not able to have a prayer at school, I'm not really surprised that the "under God" section of the Pledge would be called unconstitutional. Of course, we can debate till the cows come home just what the constitution means in regards to freedom of religion/freedom from religion/etc...

    Anyways, I say to the Supreme Court, let this ruling stand. God has no place in school....Kids don't need God.

    And what's with our currency saying "In God We Trust"? I thought there was some story about God getting pissed about people worshipping a golden calf, now he's forced to deal with his name promoting his least favorite idol? Hopefully he's still as patient as he was in the New Testament....we don't stand a chance against the wrath of the Old Testament God....

    1. Re:Possibly a shocker but no real surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually you've all been worshipping the wrong god and Quetzcoatl is fucking pissed off.

    2. Re:Possibly a shocker but no real surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....we don't stand a chance against the wrath of the Old Testament God.... Bingo. You. Don't. Stand. A. Chance.

  34. I can see it now... by phraktyl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...one Nation, under your choice of a single diety, a pantheon of dieties, or no dieties at all, indivisible...

    --
    Karma: Marginal (mostly due to the border around the website)
    1. Re:I can see it now... by mshomphe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...one Nation, under your choice of a single diety, a pantheon of dieties, or no dieties at all, indivisible...

      Or how about just "One nation, indivisible"?

      --
      She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
    2. Re:I can see it now... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      My diety only goes by the name of frank so add that in there as well.

    3. Re:I can see it now... by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That would make entirely too much sense.

    4. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...one Nation, under your choice of a single diety, a pantheon of dieties, or no dieties at all, indivisible...

      Under Hank's butt...

    5. Re:I can see it now... by kevin+lyda · · Score: 2

      how about "one nation, indivisible". like it was to begin with. what is it with you people and your primitive superstitions? are you so insecure about your irrational beliefs that you need to shove down everyone's throat?

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    6. Re:I can see it now... by SeverianDragon · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately you may find that if such a remedy were attempted that there would be groups who got angered by the *placement* of the words in the pledge. "What?!? You put a single diety before multiple deities?!?" Knowing how much politicians like to bandy semantics I wouldn't be surprised if this did become an issue.

      --
      Once more into the birch deer fiends!
    7. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're going to burn in hell

    8. Re:I can see it now... by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2

      Heh, how can a nation be under "No deities"?

      How about: One nation under (check one)
      [] God
      [] Allah
      [] Jaweh
      [] Buddha
      [] Satan
      [] Linus
      [] Other ____________

      Seriously... let anyone call upon the deity of their choice, or not utter the "One nation" bit at all suring the pledge. Of course it'll sound less cool, with people reciting different phrases all at once.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    9. Re:I can see it now... by tshak · · Score: 2

      ...one Nation, under your choice of a single diety, a pantheon of dieties, or no dieties at all, indivisible, except by their religions and world views... :-)

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    10. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      HObbiTZ, HOT GRITTTZZZZZ >:E

      EAT MY CoCK Plz.

    11. Re:I can see it now... by archen · · Score: 1

      Yeah, like this country as a whole would ever agree to that.

    12. Re:I can see it now... by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1

      Back in 1954, America was closer to God then ever before. It was well accepted to "In Trust in God" and be "Under God" as everyone was a Chirstian. Today, Americans has moved away from the Lord because the fear of accepting the ideas of being borned in to sin, accepting you're not in control of you life, and submitting your life to the will of the Lord goes completely against the current life of style of prematural sex, drug use, tattoos, selfishness, and lieing. People today do not want to accept this idea because to do so would mean what they think is ok and fun is a sin. No one like to know they are wrong. Who wants to be burden by the idea that they can't do anything they want?

      Do you remember that good thing that you did not to long ago? You didn't have to think about it, you just did it. Have you be burden by that wrongful thing that you did not to long ago? Would it be consider to be a sin? Accept the truth and learn from it.

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    13. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly my friend.

      Most american's are too filled with sin to realize the destruction of the world trade center was Allah's will.

      Now they cry about terrorism.

      Well the Quran commands every good muslim to strike back against invaders and kill them where ever they may be found.

      America is so twisted with satanic morals that they don't recognize the martyrs that brought justice to america on sept 11th as the heroic freedom fighters and true beleivers of Allah that they are.

      Maybe this america of 1954 you speak of would give true praise to heroic martyrs like Muhammed Atta and celebrate their great deeds. But the america of 2002 is filled with satanic infidels that must be destroyed by the will of Allah.

    14. Re:I can see it now... by mithras+the+prophet · · Score: 1

      [x] Other __CowboyNeal__

      --
      four nine eighteen twenty-7 thirty-nine forty-7 fiftyeight sixty-nine seventy-9 eighty-8 one-hundred-and-nine one-twenty
    15. Re:I can see it now... by synx · · Score: 2

      you state "ideas of being borned in to sin, accepting you're not in control of you life, and submitting your life to the will of the Lord"

      as a fact.

      I require you to prove this as a fact before I will believe it.

      Thank you.

    16. Re:I can see it now... by nhavar · · Score: 2

      it denies the atheists their right to deny God in a public manner :)

      --
      "Do not be swept up in the momentum of mediocrity." - anon
    17. Re:I can see it now... by mshomphe · · Score: 2

      I know this was trying to be funny, but:

      You remove God from the statement (or from government, for that matter), you don't deny the existence of God, nor do you affirm the existence of God. This is the perfect balance. Decisions of this nature are dependant on the individual.

      Atheists do not have the right to tell the government to deny God; but they do have the right to proclaim their belief in the absence of God in a public manner. Just the same as any theist. However, they also have the right not to have theistic beliefs thrust on them byt their government, which is what this is all about.

      --
      She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
    18. Re:I can see it now... by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1

      I have a problem with the Quran where is speaks against those who commit sucide. Life is a gift and to distory is by sucide is a great dishonor to the Lord. No one in a there great mind would give praise to people who kill with out just cause. Maybe you can point out the great sin America has commited. As far as I can see, there is nothing more sinful then having a dozen wives, some by force.

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    19. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "As far as I can see, there is nothing more sinful then having a dozen wives, some by force."

      Knocking down two 100+ story buildings is less sinful than polygamy? You seriously need to consider the precision of your statments.

      "Today, Americans has moved away from the Lord because the fear of accepting the ideas of being borned in to sin, accepting you're not in control of you life, and submitting your life to the will of the Lord goes completely against the current life of style of prematural sex, drug use, tattoos, selfishness, and lieing."

      You are so damn self-righteous its depressing. Your not so subtle suggestion that all non-believers are sex crazed, drug using, tattooed, selfish, lying heathens is absurd, and such statements do a great deal of harm to your credibility. Here's a news flash, just because someone doesn't share your religion, doesn't make them immoral or their behaviour unethical. Please try to comprehend that.

      I won't even bother to go on because you obviously have a very inflexible mind. As you said, "No one like to know they are wrong." and I'de say that goes double for you. Personally I like finding out when I'm wrong, I look at it as progress.

    20. Re:I can see it now... by psych031337 · · Score: 2

      ...with liberty and justice for all those who can pay for it...

      --
      +++ath0
    21. Re:I can see it now... by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1
      I require you to prove this as a fact before I will believe it.

      First, you are borned into sin. We all fall short of the glory of the Lord. We all do wrongful things because we all do not know what is wrong and what is right. If we were equal with the glory of the Lord, we would never make a wrong choice. Everything we would do would be rightous. We would never lie, never cheat, never steal, never mislead, and never commit any sins. The orignal sin was us knowing about ourselves, before we knew what was right and what was wrong. Like a bad baby that cries, not knowing what he is doing, we live our lives in the same manner, not knowing the sins we commit everyday.

      Second you are not in control of you life. There are many things in your life you have no control over. To think you are able to control everything in your life makes you feel powerful. To think that there are some thing there is nothing you can do about makes you feel weak and powerless over your own life. However, what you give up, Lord will keep you safe, provide to you the tools you need to do his work, and guide you through your life to his glory, if you just let go and give your life to him.

      The first two thing lead to the last, submiting your life to the Lord. This is the hardest for people to deal with. At anytime the Lord may say to you, "Ok, you are finshed here, move on." And a week later you might find you're self in a third world country, or closer to home, in a homeless shelter missing an important event to help a old man. You might find yourself with $40 less dollar in your wallet because you wanted to help stanger. You might find your self without a lunch because someone who hasn't ate for months asked you for help. The truth is, when you submit your life to the Lord, you may not be able to do everything what you want. Who would want to lose out, to do the Lord's work? A person that seeks the Lord love.

      SMR

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    22. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know how many people in prison are devout christians? A shitload. It's funny the gang bangers with a gang tatoo on one shoulder and a cross on the other. So tell this joker to stick it where the sun don't shine.

    23. Re:I can see it now... by superyooser · · Score: 1
      Because implicitly, that says, "One nation under no god, indivisible."

      Although

      var isGod == null,

      in many cases in reality, null is indistinguishable from a value of false.

      Ever notice how sportscasters report game scores? I remember in 1996 when Clemson lost the Gator Bowl, 40-0. (sorry to bring it up) They said the score was "forty to nothing." I said, "Hey! It's not like there's no score at all. We do have a score! It's just.. umm .. nothing. alright"

      The Bible says, "The fool says in his heart, "'There is no God.'" Translated literally from the Hebrew, that last part is only two words: "no God." The words "There is" were added to form a complete sentence in English. Contrary to popular interpretation (and my own until recently), this verse is not referring to atheists. (At least, not exclusively.) It refers to anyone who lives as if (who says in his heart, but not with his mouth, necessarily) there were no God.

      The absence of "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance endorses an agnostic mode of living (humanism - a secular, materialistic religion - I dare say). It says, "We do not acknowledge a power greater than ourselves to which our living and governing are accountable."

    24. Re:I can see it now... by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1
      Knocking down two 100+ story buildings is less sinful than polygamy?
      It can't be classified as sinful in and of itself, you have to look at the colntext - sometimes acts of war are not considered sinful. The commandment could be read as "Thou shalt not commit murder", instead of the more common "Thou shalt not kill". I'm not justifying the destruction of the World Trade Centre, but it can't be dismissed as inherently sinful without consideration of the justifications of the perpetrators. You can reject those justifications and call it sinful, but they shouldn't just be ignored.
    25. Re:I can see it now... by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      I like the way you just expanded your original thought without addressing his question at all. I won't slam you for not ANSWERING his question (you can't, nor can anyone else), but tell me, you pretended to answer his question, but really didn't. Isn't "pretending" just a fancy word for lying? Isn't lying a sin?

    26. Re:I can see it now... by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Or how about just "One nation, indivisible"?

      Because that's untrue. The USA is divided on many substantial issues, including whether there should be "one nation, undivided". Funnily enough, disagreeing with this assertion is a great way to validate it.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    27. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So when I talk, should I say "God" every third word or is every seventh word ok?

    28. Re:I can see it now... by mshomphe · · Score: 2

      Because implicitly, that says, "One nation under no god, indivisible."

      No, in fact it makes no statement whatsoever about the supernatural. That's precisely what the government of the United States is supposed to say about God: absolutely nothing.

      The absence of "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance endorses an agnostic mode of living (humanism - a secular, materialistic religion - I dare say). It says, "We do not acknowledge a power greater than ourselves to which our living and governing are accountable."

      Again, no. You cannot draw any conclusions based on the absence of saying something. Consider this:

      John says to Mary, "Do you like fruit?" Mary replies, "I like bananas." John cannot rationally conclude that Mary only likes bananas and no other fruit based on that statement alone. She has not talked about kiwi fruits or anything else. Pragmatically speaking, there is an implication (based on rules of discourse and whatnot), but the logical result of that conversation is that John knows that Mary likes bananas, and that's it.

      End result: The government is not supposed to endorse or prohibit the free exercise of religion. That includes every viewpoint. Unfortunately, in a situation like this where there is no empirically "true" religion, there can never be a end to the discussion. More importantly, the functions of government are not dependant on the existance/non-existance of a Supreme Being. Morality does not have to derive from the Divine.

      On a more personal note, I always wonder why Christians feel so compelled to espose their belief in God/Jesus in public. Jesus even admonished against public prayer. Your belief in God should be a private matter, not something that must be poured into the ears of your neighbors. Imagine, if you will, that the United States were a mostly Hindu society, and you were Christian. Would you want to be compelled to recite a pledge not only to your country, but that that country is "one nation, under the gods/Vishnu/Siva/Ganesh/etc."?

      --
      She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
    29. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Or how about just "One nation, indivisible"?

      Because that wouldn't be accurate. We are, in theory, a federal nation voluntarily composed of sovereign States. This was the view of all early American statesmen, who regularly asserted a State's right to secede at any time.

      This is a Christian nation. The Supreme Court has stated as much as Holy Trinity Church v. US (1892).

      Personally, when I recite the pledge, I say, "...one nation, under God, with liberty and justice..."

    30. Re:I can see it now... by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1
      I like the way you just expanded your original thought without addressing his question at all. I won't slam you for not ANSWERING his question (you can't, nor can anyone else), but tell me, you pretended to answer his question, but really didn't. Isn't "pretending" just a fancy word for lying? Isn't lying a sin?


      He never asked a question. A question ends in a "?", well it did the last time I checked. He made what is know as a "request". He resuested me to "prove it" and I did. I prove that we are born into sin because we are imprefect and do not know what is right and what is wrong by ourselves. I proved that you are not in control or your life and accepting that is painful. Lastly, I prove that giving up you free will to do what you want to do and to do what the Lord commands you to do is hard fpor people accept.


      Pretending is to give a false appearance of. Since there was no question asked, how do I pretend to answer a question that never existed? Pretended that there was a question in his statement, is giving a false appearance. As far I can see it you're the one pretened there is a question. Prove me where I am wrong.


      Oh btw, I accept my sin. I sin everyday of my life. There hasn't been a day that I have lived where I have not sinned. I live in sin. You can't make me feel any worst for my sin, for I give all my remose to the Lord everytime I pray.

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    31. Re:I can see it now... by Evil+MarNuke · · Score: 1

      I looked up this little statement and notoiced that the same ratio of reglius people inside of jail is the same as the ratio of people out side of jail!! Expect for muslins which were higher in jail then outside of jail. Wow. Shocking.

      --
      The journey is better then the end.
    32. Re:I can see it now... by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      well, I must have missed your proof. All you did was restate your beliefs in expanded form. (if you can't reread your post and see that, you are beyond all hope of rational, logical human thought). "Proof" is evidence that leads to a conclusion.

      Personally, I have no problems with most of point one (I don't call it "sin", but accepts we are imperfect. Perfect beings would probably last forever, for instance, and wouldn't get cancer.) and none of two (much of what happens in your life is beyond your control and accepting that is a bitch). Personally, I have no big problem with three either, but you could substitute "big red chicken from the planet Zoltar" for "Lord" and it wouldn't change it's meaning (or proof/lack thereof) significantly.

    33. Re:I can see it now... by mshomphe · · Score: 2

      I suggest reading this before citing Holy Trinity as a statement from on high. The "Christian Nation" quote is dictum, not law.

      And the States are soverign except for the powers they cede to the federal government. This is the idea of balance that permeates our Constitution. Although the states voluntarily yield power to the federal government, all governmental power derives from the people. So, if we were to be literalists, we are a nation of individuals.

      The "indivisible-ness" derives not from the fragility of the ties that bind, but rather the notion that we as a nation cannot exist without each other. Once the nation chooses to divide itself, it is no longer the United States.

      --
      She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
    34. Re:I can see it now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so will 4 billion other souls on this plannet today. Unless 2 billion christians are wrong and there is no hell.

    35. Re:I can see it now... by mshomphe · · Score: 1

      But "indivisible" doesn't mean that everyone follows lock-step in thought and action. It means that the United States, once divided, will cease to be the United States.

      --
      She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
    36. Re:I can see it now... by superyooser · · Score: 1
      I disagree with the first part of your post, but it looks like we'll just have to agree to disagree on that matter.

      Jesus even admonished against public prayer.

      Jesus was admonishing people who were hypocrites. They went out on their balconies above the streets and shouted their prayers and beat on their chest to impress others with their spirituality. Jesus was making a point that the audience of prayer is God, not men. He certainly did not tell his disciples to be undercover believers. Jesus preached to large crowds of people on mountain tops, in temples, and by the Sea of Galilee. It was common practice among the apostles to publicly preach, teach, instruct, and rebuke.

      The word "church" comes from the Greek word ecclesia, which means "called out ones." The Church (the body of believers) has been called out into the world to proclaim that God has sent his Son to be the Savior of the world.

      I always wonder why Christians feel so compelled to espouse their belief in God/Jesus in public.

      A major doctrine of Christianity is called the Great Commission.

      In Matthew 28:18-20, Jesus says, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."

      Matthew 24:14
      And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.

      Luke 4:42-43
      At daybreak Jesus went out to a solitary place. The people were looking for him and when they came to where he was, they tried to keep him from leaving them. But he said, "I must preach the good news of the kingdom of God to the other towns also, because that is why I was sent."

      Acts 1:7-8
      He said to them: "It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."

      Revelation 7:9-10
      After this I looked and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and in front of the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and were holding palm branches in their hands. And they cried out in a loud voice: "Salvation belongs to our God, who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb."

      Psalm 67:1-7
      May God be gracious to us and bless us and make his face shine upon us, Selah
      that your ways may be known on earth, your salvation among all nations. May the peoples praise you, O God; may all the peoples praise you. May the nations be glad and sing for joy, for you rule the peoples justly and guide the nations of the earth. Selah
      May the peoples praise you, O God; may all the peoples praise you. Then the land will yield its harvest, and God, our God, will bless us. God will bless us, and all the ends of the earth will fear him.

      Isaiah 49:6
      [The Lord] says: "It is too small a thing for you to be my servant to restore the tribes of Jacob and bring back those of Israel I have kept. I will also make you a light for the Gentiles, that you may bring my salvation to the ends of the earth."

      Malachi 1:11
      My name will be great among the nations, from the rising to the setting of the sun. In every place incense and pure offerings will be brought to my name, because my name will be great among the nations," says the Lord Almighty.

      Wonder no more.

    37. Re:I can see it now... by daeley · · Score: 2

      big red chicken from the planet Zoltar

      How dare you insult the Omnipotent Pullus zoltarius?! The Great Planetary Egg indeed shall return! All henetics and aroosterists shall perish in the Final Albumengeddon! All shall be tested by the the Infernal Infundibulum of the Omniscient Oviduct, yea verily, and the non-believers will be found wanting!

      (Sorry. This was just a yolk I couldn't resist.)

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    38. Re:I can see it now... by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      well, you gave me a good laugh at a time when I really needed it, so I thank you.

    39. Re:I can see it now... by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      I looked up this little statement and notoiced that the same ratio of reglius people inside of jail is the same as the ratio of people out side of jail!! Expect for muslins which were higher in jail then outside of jail. Wow. Shocking.

      You would think that there would be a lower ratio of Christians in jail. With them being moral and all.

      There are very few true Christians. Very few.

  35. The founding fathers were Deists by Zen+Mastuh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Besides, how can a 48-year-old amendment be "The foundation and tradition of our country"? Stop hyperventilating for a moment and re-read the decision. The amendment to the Pledge of Allegiance favors monotheism, the Semitic religions specifically. This is not the end of the world by any means, just a return to the Constitution.

    --
    "What is the sound of one belly slapping?"
  36. Pushing monotheism by totallygeek · · Score: 4, Funny
    This can be fixed by changing it to

    One nation, under G[g]od(s)*, indivisible...

    * or under no devine rule


    I don't see what the fuss is. I doubt seriously that all Christians or even monotheistic theologists agree on all tenants of what God is. So, what Eisenhower thought God was and what he expected "his" nation to envision shouldn't be any different than our money mentioning "In God We Trust". I don't see too many people giving up money because of the statement on the bills and coins.

    1. Re:Pushing monotheism by gerardrj · · Score: 2

      If you use and look at your cash, you will see that there is a fair amount of it that has the "in god we trust" blacked out. If you consider that the Gov remvoes these bills from circulation, that it takes effort to take this marking action on all your billx, and the relatively low percentage of athiests, the small number of aldered bills becomes even more significant.

      My personal choice is just to not use cash. I refuse make purchases with money that has a written contract with the purchacer whereby I am forced to purport belief in a supreme deity.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    2. Re:Pushing monotheism by Oztun · · Score: 2

      The fuss is about the word "God". If you look in a book on deities you will find this word is reserved for the christian/muslim/judism monotheistic deity.

      Most people today confuse the word god because at some point english speakers used it to represent any God. This is not its origin however as it wasn't meant to be generic term. Technically the word god was not meant to be a univeral word.

      Many believers of other religions would argue that this is christians way of forcing them to accept their deity. Similar to if we called all deities buddah from here on out.

      I'm not saying I agree or disagree just telling you the argument I have heard from believers of other religions.

    3. Re:Pushing monotheism by PD · · Score: 1

      That regexp needs some work. Jews spell it with the 'o' replaced with an underscore. Also, atheists need to have an appropriate match in there somewhere.

    4. Re:Pushing monotheism by Trinition · · Score: 1

      I doubt seriously that all Christians or even monotheistic theologists agree on all tenants of what God is.

      Perhaps, but I bet most atheists agree that there isn't a God. Why let that option stand as an asterisk instead of part of the embedded expression?

    5. Re:Pushing monotheism by Trinition · · Score: 1

      I don't see too many people giving up money because of the statement on the bills and coins.

      And the man who brought the suit didn't want ot give up the Pledge of Allegiance. He just didn't want his daughter to have to choose between reciting it and feeling like an outcast.

      To follow your analogy, you see people fighting the inclusion of "In God We Trust" on our monies *instead* of refusing to use money.

    6. Re:Pushing monotheism by nathanh · · Score: 2
      I don't see what the fuss is. I doubt seriously that all Christians or even monotheistic theologists agree on all tenants of what God is.

      If you don't see what the fuss is all about then perhaps you wouldn't mind changing it to "one nation, under Satan". Christians might have a whinge but they can just shutup and deal with it, just like the atheists have had to do for the past 50 years.

    7. Re:Pushing monotheism by ddstreet · · Score: 2
      I don't see too many people giving up money because of the statement on the bills and coins.

      You know, if every dollar bill had, in huge boldface type across both sides of the bill, the words "YOUR MOTHER IS A BITCH", I wouldn't like it, but I'd sure as hell still be using that money.

      It's the same, obviously, with "In God We Trust". Those who don't believe in (the Christian) God don't like it, but of COURSE we're still going to use the bills.

      The argument that people still use money so they must not be offended by "In God We Trust" is useful to those who can't come up with a REAL reason that it should be on bills or coins.

    8. Re:Pushing monotheism by chuck · · Score: 2

      One nation, under G[g]od(s)*, indivisible...

      Heh... at first, I thought that was a regexp! :) I was like... "Ggodsssssss"? But I don't think one nation under "[Gg]ods?" would catch on.
  37. Pledge is Voluntary, unlike money..... by Moderator · · Score: 0

    The pledge is totally voluntary, unlike money, where I have to put my hands on God's filthy name every time I make a tranaction. I think our nation's motto "In God We Trust" should be looked into as well.

    --
    The World is Yours.
    1. Re:Pledge is Voluntary, unlike money..... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Have you ever seen schoolchildren doing something voluntary every day in such a manner?

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  38. Finally! by cstec · · Score: 1

    I'm really glad this finally was addressed. Now I'm a parent and was faced with the problem of trying to explain to my kid that he has to lie about his feelings and pretend to go along with the other drones. I'm amazed to find out that the 'under God' was a hack added on later, but it makes sense now. I hated it as it has been, but take that out, and the Pledge is something I'm proud to express; a pledge to America, not just America the Deist. I'm sick of the New Christian Inquisition; It's about time America stood for freedom again.

    1. Re:Finally! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that's the way you really feel, then put your money where your mouth is. I dare you to stop using all forms of US currency with "In God We Trust" on it. If you don't, your a hipocrit!

      Signed,
      A God loving and fearing American.

    2. Re:Finally! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In every public elementary school each day during the school year at the beginning of the first regularly scheduled class or activity period at which the majority of the pupils of the school normally begin the schoolday, there shall be conducted appropriate patriotic exercises.

      Note that it does NOT say that all students must PARTICIPATE. Basically the teachers must conduct the pledge, but legally the students are not required to participate in it. From memory, this seems to also be true in Colorado and Massachusetts, where I've gone to school (back in the day)

  39. An atheist's point of view. by fmaxwell · · Score: 5, Funny

    As an atheist, all I can say about this ruling is "Thank God!"

    ;)

    1. Re:An atheist's point of view. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Amen ;)

    2. Re:An atheist's point of view. by Kymermosst · · Score: 2

      As an atheist, all I can say about this ruling is "Thank God!"

      And, as a typical hypocrite, you use the word "God" anyway, whenever it suits you, even to score +5 funny.

      You see, you just said you were an athiest, yet you used God to gain something.

      Interesting.

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    3. Re:An atheist's point of view. by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      And, as a typical hypocrite, you use the word "God" anyway, whenever it suits you, even to score +5 funny.

      I am perfectly comfortable using the word "God" as part of a joke. How is that hypocritical?

      You see, you just said you were an athiest, yet you used God to gain something.

      Using the word "God" in a joke does not imply a belief in God. Everyone else seemed to get that. Why are you having so much trouble with it?

    4. Re:An atheist's point of view. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well yeah, he used the word god, and said he was an atheist, duh. "God!" and "Jesus!" and "Christ!" and "Shit!" and "fuck!" are exclamations removed from their original meaning.

      If a female characterized herself as being a dick, is she being a hypocrite? I think not.

    5. Re:An atheist's point of view. by Kymermosst · · Score: 2

      I'm just making the restless natives react.

      Worked, didn't it?

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    6. Re:An atheist's point of view. by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 2
      Using the word "God" in a joke does not imply a belief in God. Everyone else seemed to get that. Why are you having so much trouble with it?
      fmaxwell, I think that that guy is just trolling. You should probably ignore him and let the chips fall where they may. Your time is probably worth more than that.

      Just to put this into perspective, I am a Christian, and yet I'm suggesting that you ignore this. He looks like he's lost his ability to reason.
    7. Re:An atheist's point of view. by Snaller · · Score: 2

      >As an atheist, all I can say about this ruling
      >is "Thank God!"

      No no, "Thank Q!"

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  40. How about by H1r0Pr0tag0n1st · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...One nation, Under the sky in which may dwell a deity, If you happen to belive in that, or not. Indivisable, exept for those of us who have nothing better to do than file stupid lawsuits and bicker about unimportant BS. With liberty and justice, for those who can afford it and don't piss off John Ashcroft.

    Please take this as the joke it is. Because surely if I can't laugh about this I'm going to cry.

    --
    Americans could not be more self absorbed if they were made of equal parts water and paper towel. -Dennis Miller
  41. In case it is slashdotted by lingqi · · Score: 2, Informative

    Earthlink have a bandwidth cap, so...

    not the entire document is here, just the important stuff Eisenhower said:

    We are particularly thankful to you for your part in the movement to have the words 'under God' added to our Pledge of Allegiance. These words will remind Americans that despite our great physical strength we must remain humble. They will help us to keep constantly in our minds and hearts the spiritual and moral principles which alone give dignity to man, and upon which our way of life is founded. For the contribution which your organization has made to this cause, we must be genuinely grateful.

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

  42. Use the almighty by cnkeller · · Score: 2

    "..one nation under Bush..." has a certain ring to it. Oh and that's the presidents name too...

    --

    there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

  43. The Pledge has an intersting history by FreeUser · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those non-Americans reading this thread, the pledge of allegiance goes like this:

    I Pledge Allegiance to the Flag
    Of the United States of America
    And to the Republic
    For which it stands
    One Nation, Under God
    Indivisible, With Liberty and Justice for All.

    Interestingly enough, one of the early drafts went something like

    ...And to the Republic
    For Which it Stands,
    One Nation, Indivisible,
    With Liberty, Equality, And Justice for all.

    However, at the time (early 20th century), that version was rejected because of pressure from the pro-segregationists. Interestingly it wasn't only the fear of racial equality that was cited as a reason for rejecting that particular draft, but the appalling possiblity that it could be construed to imply the women should be considered equal to men as well. God forbid.

    Frankly, rulings like this restore some of my faith in the judicial process. As currently written, the plege should be ruled unconstitutional, as (to refer to another post) should the engraving of the words "In God We Trust" on our currency.

    Neither reference to God in either context serves to enhance freedom of religion, and both serve to undermine the fundamental separation of church and state upon which the republic was founded, revisionist Christian rhetoric to the contrary notwithstanding.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    1. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by npsimons · · Score: 1
      Neither reference to God in either context serves to enhance freedom of religion, and both serve to undermine the fundamental separation of church and state upon which the republic was founded, revisionist Christian rhetoric to the contrary notwithstanding.


      One of my favorite quotes:


      The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion.
      -- George Washington

    2. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Action of Second Continental Congress, July 4, 1776
      The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen United States of America

      WHEN in the Course of human Events,
      it becomes necessary for one People to dissolve the Political Bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the Separation.
      WE hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.

      -----------------

      The real trouble (in respect to upholding the spirit of the constitution) is that I am FORCED to pay taxes to a school system i don't support. It is imposible to justify government interferece(my taxes for school system), and then yell that the school system is now a funcion of the government and hence separation of chuch and state should apply. This is akin to nationalizing radio station (supported by taxes) and then claim that "God" can not be "promoted" on the air because of separation of chuch and state.

      Finally, our currency is not a government note, but rather a note from the Federal Reverse ( a technically private bank), so there is no "chuch and state" issue.

    3. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by Ex-Parrot · · Score: 1
      One Nation, Under God

      I don't think there is a comma in that phrase, but everyone always pauses there when reciting it. I've always felt kind of weird trying to say it "right" by not pausing there while everyone else in the room stopped for a breath.

      Neither reference to God in either context serves to enhance freedom of religion, and both serve to undermine the fundamental separation of church and state upon which the republic was founded

      I always thought the republic was founded on the universal rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Furthermore, the whole concept of the "separation of church and state" stems from the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution, which was ratified after the founding of the republic. That's not revisionist, although it may be rhetoric. :)

      --
      To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation. -- St. Augustine
    4. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by _fuzz_ · · Score: 1

      It's in the PDF that's linked to the story. The Pledge was originally drafted in 1942. The phrase "under God" was added in 1954 as an anticommunist act -- communism promoting atheism and materialism. It was noted that the purpose was not to establish any sort of religon, but to show recognition for divine influence in our nation's history. Interestingly, 50 years later I think our nation is possibly to most materialistic around.

      --
      47% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
    5. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by RoninM · · Score: 2
      The pause is an artifact of the pacing of the original ("one nation, indivisible"). It should be noted that in all the schools I have gone to, those that used the pledge (and most, in fact, didn't), never included, "under God." This being 20 years after the phrasing was added and, for a short time, in a private Christian school.

      Did anyone else grow up in or around San Francisco using only the older pledge?

      --
      If a corporation is a personhood, is owning stock slavery?
    6. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by blakespot · · Score: 1

      One of my favorite quotes:

      The government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion.
      -- George Washington


      Right! So let's do George proud and clean up the Christian rhetoric, such as the "under God" bit added to the pledge, that has polluted the separation of church and state upon which the republic was built!

      blakespot

      --
      -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
      iPod Hacks.com
    7. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by the_greywolf · · Score: 1

      the problem with abolishing the pledge will lead to the abolition of anything that includes the same concept of the country being under God. the declaration of independednce says "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights", and as you mentioned, money says "in God we Trust." it says that in the entrance to the Senate Assembly hall, too. the top of the Washington monument says "Praise the Lord!" many important documents relevant to the foundation of the government would be rendered unconstitutional, such as the Gettysberg Address, among other things. court oaths would be changed: "Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, so help you God?" many government proceedings which are opened with prayer would be restructured. the circuit courts which open with "God help this honorable court" or something like that would change their proceedings.

      this is a hell of a lot deeper than anyone here seems to realize. Judeo-Christian faith is the basis which the government was built on. it is the history on which the nation was founded. you can't simply strike it out. i don't think they'd let you.

      --
      grey wolf
      LET FORTRAN DIE!
    8. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by raistlinne · · Score: 2
      Neither reference to God in either context serves to enhance freedom of religion, and both serve to undermine the fundamental separation of church and state upon which the republic was founded, revisionist Christian rhetoric to the contrary notwithstanding.

      And just to play a bit of devil's advocate: what of the effect of enforcing an essentially atheistic education through a person's 18th year by law? Is not forcing a person to avoid their religion for 8 hours a day an interference? (note: not everyone can afford to send their children to private schools or to home school them, and being poor is not a legitimate reason for a person to be deprived of their rights.)

      --
      They laughed at Einstein. They laughed at the Wright Brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown. -- C. Sagan
    9. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is "forcing a person to avoid their religion for 8 hours a day". Kids are free to talk about religion and pray any time it would not end up interfering with class. The only time religion in public schools is a problem constitutionally is when school officials attempt to force religion on a captive audience such as by leading prayers.

      Also, where in the US can someone get an atheistic public education? By that, I mean one where it is taught routinely that god doesn't exist? I'm not talking about schools where facts which contradict some religous faith or another are taught, but where it is acutally states that belief in a God is wrong. The answer is the same place you can get a religious public education - nowhere.

    10. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by YourGarbageMan · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that putting the word "God" on *money* has to be one of the most sacrilegious ideas of all time. Its bad from both perspectives so how the hell did it get there?

    11. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Communism promotes materialism, but Capatilism... doesn't???

      Why doesn't anything make sense?

      Also, why is communism treated like a dirty pair of underwear in your country? I mean, I saw a post from a guy who sounded horrified that it was even legal to teach communism in a school.
      Are you people even fearmongering for a reason nowadays, or is it just all those crappy 80s movies about evil Russians?
      (Sorry, not directed at any direct comment of the parent)

    12. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by demaria · · Score: 2

      Here's another fun one. Find where in the constitution it spells out exactly that a government created & sponsored public education system is required.

    13. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      ---their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.---

      Funny, I don't remember that in the Constit... oh wait, it's not. Are you going to quote the Articles of Confederation next?

      ---It is imposible to justify government interferece(my taxes for school system), and then yell that the school system is now a funcion of the government and hence separation of chuch and state should apply.---

      Uh, what? When the government steals your money to fund something, that something (you know, what it DOES with your money) most certainly is a function of government, subject to all its regulations.

      ---Finally, our currency is not a government note, but rather a note from the Federal Reverse ( a technically private bank), so there is no "chuch and state" issue.---

      All of which was set in motion, and is ultimately still controlled by Acts of Congress. So, yes it is. And the motto is on the coins because it is THE motto!

    14. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by junkgrep · · Score: 2

      I don't understand how people can possible be this dishonest. No is in any way forced to avoid their religion at any time. Just because no government official is lecturing your kid on what gods to believe in does not mean that the kid is a default atheist: He can sign hymns at any time that anyone is allowed to speak (i.e. anytime but during class), if he wants to pray, he can pray all day long instead of listening.

      And would any religious parent really want the GOVERNMENT teaching religion to their children? What if the majority of your town is Mormon, and decides to slant the teachings that way. Aren't Jews and Baptists both in public school a little screwed?

    15. Re:The Pledge has an intersting history by clovis · · Score: 1

      "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights"

      This always bugged me.
      It always seemed like my mom would not acknowledge that I had any rights, much less any inalienable ones.

  44. Not a problem... by sterno · · Score: 5, Funny

    US currency says "In God We Trust". Now, if that means you don't believe in God, it simply translated to, "Trust No One". Perhaps an even better motto when dealing with large piles of cash :)

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:Not a problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe the message is that the money is God? ;)

      Think about it, after this decision the money will be the one thing in a child's life with "God" stamped on it, unless their parents put it there. Obvious conclusion: the "In God We Trust" bit is a label, the money is God, and God looks either like Abraham Lincoln or a Masonist pyramid with a floating eye over it.

    2. Re:Not a problem... by jackb_guppy · · Score: 2

      Actually, your money can not be legal tender... becuase it violates the 1st.

      So new money!!!

    3. Re:Not a problem... by hoowee · · Score: 1
      I think I saw that up as a check-writing policy at some store:

      In God We Trust: Everyone else must pay in cash.

      --

      Comic Book Guy: "There is no Groening in my store."
    4. Re:Not a problem... by Servo5678 · · Score: 2
      US currency says "In God We Trust". Now, if that means you don't believe in God, it simply translated to, "Trust No One". Perhaps an even better motto when dealing with large piles of cash :)

      Yeah! That'd be neat! We can call it MulderMoney!

    5. Re:Not a problem... by jx100 · · Score: 1

      You mean this?

    6. Re:Not a problem... by Wolfier · · Score: 2

      I'll gladly take the old money away from your hands. Email me.

    7. Re:Not a problem... by jafac · · Score: 3, Funny

      ok - you'll shortly be receiving dozens of emails with the subject "Make money at home fast!"

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    8. Re:Not a problem... by gralem · · Score: 1

      Using your logic, the pledge of allegience is constituation since if you don't believe in God, it simply translated to "...One nation, under no one, indivisible...". That solves EVERYTHING!

      ---gralem

    9. Re:Not a problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or how about the more accurate "In *This* God We Trust"?

  45. Time for NATIONAL RELIGION by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just goes to show we need to have a national religion.

    We just need to make it offical that we are a jewdeo/christian country...

    I think its time for a constitional amendment stating that the US is founded by, and belives in the jewish/christian beliefs.. while we tolerate other religions, only jewdeo/christian belifs can be promoted by the government.

  46. It is such a very sad day... by SkyLeach · · Score: 2, Troll

    When our nation is so obsessed with stuff like this.

    We waste billions on lawsuits which do nothing but remove the moral fabric of our country. Ever since the "liberation" of the people in the twenties this country has had an incredible exponential increase in social problems. Crime, disease, civil unrest, and violence have all increased dramatically while actual personal freedom has been destroyed.

    Our education system is a joke because there is no enforcement anymore. It's becomming impossible to enforce any discipline at all because everyone attempts to justify their POV on why they should be exempt from law, responsibility and accountability.

    Our real freedoms are being drained away while we bicker and fight over the freedom not to hear what's good for us.

    God have mercy on this country. I believe our foolishness will soon destroy this country.

    --
    My $0.02 will always be worth more than your â0.02, so :-p
    1. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      the utter ridiculousness of the liberalization and political correctness of our "society" has already destroyed the country.

    2. Re:It is such a very sad day... by gerardrj · · Score: 2

      You can't remove the morals of a country or a person via a legal proceeding, or making or replealing a law. Besides, responsibility and accountability are what are really laking in the country, not morals or ethics.
      If passing a law, or winning a legal suit somehow removes or diminishes one of your morals, then your morals where pretty weak to begin with, and probably needed to be shaken up.
      Further more, passing or repealing a law does not add or remove any of your rights.
      No matter what the current laws are, you have the right to do anything you want, Including say "under god" in the pledge if it makes you all warm and fuzzy, as long as you are willing to accept the concequences.
      BY anything, I mean you have the right to commit murder if you so choose. Society though has the right to arrest, procecute and condem you to jail or death for your muders.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    3. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hehehe, you really eat up that christian coalition shit, huh?
      Everybody's got something to blame it on...

    4. Re:It is such a very sad day... by g0hare · · Score: 0

      Exactly WHY is this country so great and deserving of special attention from The Big Bonzi Buddy Up[stairs?

      --
      Vote Quimby!
    5. Re:It is such a very sad day... by dvdeug · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ever since the "liberation" of the people in the twenties this country has had an incredible exponential increase in social problems.

      Yeah, because look at how Al Capone runs everything . . . oops, that was the 1920's. Well, look at how cocaine is openly sold in stores . . . oops, that was the late 1800's. What about the way our kids are forced to work at hard labor under dangerous conditions . . . oops, that before the 1920's too. Look at how blacks are held in slavery - um, how women can't vote? What, exactly, are you talking about?

      disease [has] [...] increased dramatically

      Huh? I don't remember anyone near to me getting smallpox, nor do I remember any flu epedemic wiping out millions. Life expectancy has consistently gone upwards.

    6. Re:It is such a very sad day... by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 3, Funny
      Before the "liberation" you talk about, women couldn't vote, own things, have an education, go out after dark, have a career, say no to their husbands, or generally live how they wanted. Before the "good old days" minorities couldn't buy things, get an education, be taught to read, choose their own religion, vote, co-exisit with whites, marry or date whites, walk down the street without fear of being killed for no reason. Sexual minorities were as a matter of policy imprisoned, beaten, labotimized, institutionalized, killed, executed, and generally treated like subhumans.

      Watch your step .. you might get the Family Values folks sexually aroused.

    7. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Quixotic+Raindrop · · Score: 1

      Morality and religion are not equivalent; in fact, it can be successfully argued that religion inhibits morality. Calling the requirement for schoolchildren to participate in the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance a ripping of "the moral fabric" of America implies that the Pledge, itself, embodies some kind of morality. It does not, in fact, speak to any moral good, morally laudable (or repugnant), or morally interesting behaviors whatsoever. It does, however, reveal a preference for a God, which is expressly the problem the court has with the Pledge. Justifying one's point of view shouldn't be necessary; justifying ramming one's point of view down someone else's throat should be necessary. Just because 99 of 100 people may believe in the Tooth Fairy doesn't mean that the remaining 1 in 100 can be forced to.

      The court's take had it right: if the Pledge said "one nation, under Satan" or "one Nation, under the Aesir," there would have been a hailstorm of critisism (probably during the debate for adding the language in 1954). Clearly, inserting any relgiously overtoned language generates quite a bit of controversy; ergo, it should all be removed.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
    8. Re:It is such a very sad day... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Back in the days of the First Galactic Empire.... needless to say, with all this adventuring, many men became fabulously wealthy. But that was OK, because no one was really poor. At least, no one worth bothering about... :)


      apologies to Douglas Adams

    9. Re:It is such a very sad day... by stonedown · · Score: 1

      Put yourself in the shoes of someone who doesn't believe in God. Why should they have to feel like an outsider, because they don't feel comfortable expressing belief in God, in the state-sanctioned Pledge of Allegiance? OK, I know you think atheists are evil, drink human blood, and all that, but really atheists are people too. ;-) They do exist. Really! :-)

      Tell you what, why don't we change the Pledge of Allegiance so it includes a renunciation of God? How would you feel about that? Not too good, huh? Kind of goes against your personal beliefs, doesn't it? I hope you're starting to get the picture. This is why government should not be in the religion business.

      I'm not sure I want to get into the whole debate about moral decay due to the movement away from religion. All I can say is - study history. How many wars had to take place and how many people had to die in the name of religion, including the Christian God?

    10. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Skyshadow · · Score: 2
      Gimme a break.

      It's only a "sad" day if you think our country is nothing beyond flags and forced repetition of some legislated mantra.

      If, on the other hand, you believe that the strength of the US springs from our republic and the protections it provides its citizens, it's a happy day.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    11. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the fabric of foolishness is made of small threads... this case is Not inconsequential.

    12. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So homeschool your children and shut the fsck up already...

    13. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Ashtangi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      disease, or dis-ease does not imply a viral or bacterial type infection. Nor does it imply any other illness for which you might go to the hospital and take some pills. It implies simply that there is something within that is causing some kind of problem: physical, mental, or spiritual. Our society suffers from much disease.

    14. Re:It is such a very sad day... by chefmonkey · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what there is to get upset about. In the 50's, a bunch of McCarthy's contemporaries attempted to fortify the moral fiber content of the pledge of allegience by installing their own personal religious beliefs in it. Half a decade later, this bizarre revisionism is called out for the attempted melding of church and state that it was intended to be... and we're concerned why?

      In today's politically charged climate which equates terrorism with certain religions, I think this sort of removal represents a very sane step towards cooling a climate of implied state-sponsored support of Judaeo-Christian religions. How would you feel if your kids were asked to pledge allegiance to "one nation under Allah" at school? Even if it doesn't bother you personally, don't you think it might ruffle a few feathers? So how do you suppose Muslims must feel about their kids pleding allegiance to "one nation under God?"

    15. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      disease, or dis-ease does not imply a viral or bacterial type infection. Nor does it imply any other illness for which you might go to the hospital and take some pills. It implies simply that there is something within that is causing some kind of problem: physical, mental, or spiritual

      Hmph. I think what giving me problems is not coming from within (or with-in), but rather from User #583372.

    16. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the arrogant oppression and moralizing of the conservative right is actually what has already destroyed the country

    17. Re:It is such a very sad day... by SkyLeach · · Score: 2

      Well, I really do feel what I wrote, but I wouldn't have posted it if it weren't for the fact that...

      Y. H.B.T.

      And it was so very artfully done too. Congrats to the moderator who caught it.

      The moral fabric of this country has been being torn apart by the very people who post on /.

      You don't need me to tell you that the vast majority of /. readers support 0 accountability, 100% freedom to do whatever they want, to anyone they want. Of course, most of them don't understand what happens in an anarchy.

      Quick clue: in a total moral anarchy morality is completely subjective. Under subjective morality, anything is ok given the correct circumstances: like being able to get away with it.

      Remember that big ass bully or HS jock who would do sh*t to you that hurt or embarassed you, but the coach wouldn't do anything about it? Yes, that bully was devoid of the morality of being kind to others because it's right.

      Take morality away from the world and life will really suck.

      But why should I bother, I'm chainging nothing by typing this comment.

      --
      My $0.02 will always be worth more than your â0.02, so :-p
    18. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spiritual disease.... uh huh.

      If you mean religious wackos, then yeah I agree. They're kind of a spiritual disease if you look at it that way.

      Bring back polio!

    19. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Sloppy · · Score: 2

      [It is such a very sad day...] When our nation is so obsessed with stuff like this.

      Yes, but that sad day was in the 1950s. Somebody in government was obsessed enough to go out of their way to insert those words into the pledge. How can you accuse the present-day virus-scanners of obsession? They are merely reacting to a provocation.

      Our education system is a joke because there is no enforcement anymore.

      Our education system is a joke because the government is involved in it. Get rid of public education, and most of the problems go away.

      Quit treating education as some sort of right at taxpayers' expense, and then everyone can have what they want. I won't have to pay for someone else's kid to be brainwashed into being a wacko mystic cultist, and you won't have to pay for someone else's kid to be brainwashed into being a godless ammoral hellbound heathen. Everybody wins when you abolish socialism, especially those who want to show kids what responsibility really means.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    20. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "stuff like this" you refer to is directly related to our freedoms, and has nothing whatsoever to do with our moral fabric.

    21. Re:It is such a very sad day... by funkhauser · · Score: 2
      The word "disease" was originally "dis-ease", but the word has underwent semantic change. I really don't think it means "dis-ease" at all now, except to people who want to make pedantic smart-ass comments.

    22. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, yeah right.

      Morality and Religion are two completely different concepts. Traditionally people like yourself try to combine them into the same thing but they are not.

      That "big ass bully or HS jock" could very well be an alter boy and that won't prevent them from bullying you. Being religious doesn't imply one is moral. There have been lots of immoral religious nuts. Just look at the Crusades for a few examples.

      This argument is simply about our nation standing up for the beliefs it claims it does. Separation of church and state is an important part of that.

      Removing "under God" doesn't have anything to do with moral anarchy

    23. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey buddy, stfu. Women gaining the right to vote has caused the downfall of western civilization, or that's what some sociologists will tell you. Women keep men in check, when women move to the place of men who keeps who in check? No one, fucking dykes are taking over the planet, and soon everyone is going to die because of it.

    24. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Ashtangi · · Score: 1

      If you are implying that I was making a pedantic smart ass comment, then that of course is your opinion. It was not at all my intention. Most of the people I spend time with would still accept the word "disease" in the way that I described. I was merely pointing out the semantic difference.

    25. Re:It is such a very sad day... by Clanner · · Score: 1

      So your "God" knows what's good for everyone? Is that what you're implying?
      What I fail to understand is why we as a society can't accept the idea that there are multiple religions, and that no one specific religion is any "better" than any other. You believe what you want, and I'll believe what I want. As long as I do not infringe on your rights and you do not infringe on mine, what's the problem?
      Religion has been (indirectly) the number cause of death in mankind's history- look at the Crusades, the Middle East for the last 50 years, etc. I fail to see the benefit of a belief structure that causes wars to be waged simply because some other group of people disagreed.

      --
      The dry fish swims alone.
  47. The 9th Circuit court by elgee · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The 9th Circuit is the most liberal and the most overturned appeals court in the country.

  48. The ruling is somewhat misplaced... by signe · · Score: 2

    What I don't understand is why the court did not rule that the legislation that President Eisenhower passed in 1954, which added the words "under God" to the pledge of allegiance, was itself unconstitutional. This would have been more correct, because the separation of church and state never should have allowed this to stand. This would have reduced the pledge back to its original form, which would not have been objectionable.

    Of course, any pledge like that, recited by rote without understanding the meaning, quickly loses any meaning. If you don't know what you're saying, or you're saying it only because you've been forced, what's the point? I think it's just as well that it was removed from the schools for that reason. But this wasn't the right way to accomplish it.

    -Todd

    --
    "The details of my life are quite inconsequential..."
    1. Re:The ruling is somewhat misplaced... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would make more sense to attack it from that aspect. However, the specific suit as it was originally filed specifically targeted the Pledge itself. The suit was initiated by a father in Scramento, CA on behalf of his second grade daughter.

      Perhaps the next suit should go after the initiating legislation. Maybe it will be able to stand up to the Supreme Court as the legislation doesn't hold the symbolism that the Pledge does.

      We can hope anyway.....

  49. so what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps we should just drill into our kids skulls to pledge our allegence to the mighty corporations that give us our soda machines and have enough money to buy laws. Also allow them to alter textbooks to include product placements... If you have 3 cans coke each containg 12 ounces of pop, how many refreshingly delicious ounces can we enjoy of the real thing?

  50. don't panic - CELEBRATE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Panic, Hell! I'm celebrating! I'm an atheist who almost got kicked out of High School during the Vietnam War for refusing to recite the pledge. I've been waiting for a ruling like this for 30 years. Hooray!

    1. Re:don't panic - CELEBRATE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thirty years and you still haven't graduated? Dude, hit the books.

  51. Pledge of Allegiance � Yankee Propaganda? by usurper_ii · · Score: 1


    The issue here is not should we be thankful for our country or should we give honor to those to whom honor is due -- clearly we should. The issue is not the legitimacy of individuals "pledging allegiance" to a nation -- under proper circumstances this may be appropriate.

    The issue is should the Church, which is made up of folk from every people, tongue, tribe, and nation (a truly trans-national and multi-cultural institution -- in the right sense of the term), pledge its "allegiance" to one particular nation? It wasn't that long ago that such a thought would have been abhorrent to God's people. Not because they were unthankful for God's blessings upon their country and not because they didn't love their country, but because they would have viewed such an activity as a compromise of the spiritual integrity of the Church -- which does not belong to any nation and is not beholden to any government. This distinction is lost on most modern Americans. Most, I'm afraid, view the Church as indebted to the State, existing for the good of the State, and established to promote loyalty to the State.

    Sadly, this is just the sort of thing the "Pledge of Allegiance" was designed to instill in the people of this country. It was originally written by Francis Bellamy (of the famous Bellamy family). The Bellamys were prominent socialists (Edward Bellamy, cousin to Francis, wrote the famous 19th century work of socialist fiction Looking Backward). Francis wrote this pledge in connection with the 400th anniversary of Columbus' discovery of America. It was first recited at the National School Convention in 1892. Francis' plan was to have the school children recite this as a form of indoctrination (much like the tactics Hitler later used to indoctrinate German youth). [It was originally recited with the arm outstretched, hand pointed, palm down -- identical to what the world would later recognize as the Nazi salute]

    By this means (Francis hoped) the children would learn to think of the nation (in its new, post Civil War form -- i.e. "indivisible") as the proper recipient of their ultimate allegiance. They would give reverence to the nation and never again think of it as a "voluntary union." The nation began to be viewed like unto God Himself (i.e. "indivisible", worthy of our deepest trust and highest commitment). We would become one people who would all be devoted to promoting the one nation as opposed to our individual, familial, or religious interests. [btw, the phrase "under God" was not in the original -- that was added in 1954 during the Eisenhower administration -- Francis did not believe in God]

    We have indeed become such a people. The vast majority of our fellow citizens view the Government as the one indispensable institution. They believe in it, trust in it, and depend upon it. There is no longer any analogous loyalty to the family or the Church (neither of which is viewed as important to our well-being) -- only the State holds that revered position in the minds of most Americans.

    Now even the Church views it as part of its duty to "pledge allegiance" to the nation. Methinks something is badly amiss.

    -- J. Steven Wilkins

    1. Re:Pledge of Allegiance � Yankee Propaganda? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who cares.. religion is a bunch of lies and propaganda.. and the people who follow it are absorbing the minds of hypocrites..

      the fact that people even bother debating about the issue of "God" being used in a pledge of allegiance is beyond ridiculous.. there are far more worst things happening on this planet.. and we're complaining about this?!?!

    2. Re:Pledge of Allegiance � Yankee Propaganda? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually Francis was supposedly a Baptist Minister. Here is some info snipped from positiveatheism.org:

      Francis Bellamy
      American Baptist minister; author of the original Pledge of Allegiance; brother of Socialist author Edward Bellamy, whose Socialist convictions Francis shared, costing him his pastorate in Boston in 1891 for refusing to hide his Socialist convictions during the course of his sermons

      I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands,
      one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
      -- Francis Bellamy, the original Pledge of Allegiance, as it appeared in the issue of The Youth's Companion (September 8, 1892)

      The true reason for allegiance to the Flag is the "republic for which it stands."... And what does that vast thing, the Republic mean? It is the concise political word for the Nation the One Nation which the Civil War was fought to prove. To make that One Nation idea clear, we must specify that it is indivisible, as Webster and Lincoln used to repeat in their great speeches. And its future?
      Just here arose the temptation of the historic slogan of the French Revolution which meant so much to Jefferson and his friends, "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity." No, that would be too fanciful, too many thousands of years off in realization. But we as a nation do stand square on the doctrine of liberty and justice for all.
      -- Francis Bellamy, giving his reasons for writing the Pledge in the first place, quoted from Dr. John Baer, "The Pledge of Allegiance: A Short History (1992)

      Baer: Quadricentennial Columbus Day Celebration

      "In 1892 Francis Bellamy was also a chairman of a committee of state superintendents of education in the National Education Association. As its chairman, he prepared the program for the public schools' quadricentennial celebration for Columbus Day in 1892. He structured this public school program around a flag raising ceremony and a flag salute his 'Pledge of Allegiance.'"
      -- Dr. John Baer, in his essay, "The Pledge of Allegiance: A Short History" (1992), see also Baer, "The Strange Origin of the Pledge of Allegiance," from Propaganda Review (Summer, 1989)

      Granddaughter: Would Have Resented 'Under God'

      "Bellamy's granddaughter said he also would have resented this second change ... In his retirement in Florida, he stopped attending church because he disliked the racial bigotry he found there."
      -- Dr. John Baer, in his essay, "The Pledge of Allegiance: A Short History" (1992)

  52. The pledge is creepy... by Saige · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you think about it, the entire idea of pledging allegiance to a FLAG, a piece of cloth, is pretty darn creepy. It's things like that that give people the idea to create a constitutional amendment to prevent burning a flag - as if that act somehow takes away freedom - it's the amendment that would be taking away freedom.

    Repeating the pledge, every day in school, over and over, seems an awfully lot like an attempt to indoctrinate children, instead of educating them.

    I harbor no special feelings for the flag, or toward the name of this county. My feelings are for the liberty and freedom themselves, as they're what is important, not some design on cloth.

    --
    "You know your god is man-made when he hates all the same people you do."
    1. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They aren't pledging allegiance to the piece of cloth. They are pledging to what it represents.

      As far as pledging every day...Yeah, it can be considered indoctrination. It can also be considered a patriotic act to begin every day with unity. Celebrating the 4th of July every year isn't indoctrination, is it?

      You should move somewhere with a real authoritarian government. Go to China. You can find out what real indoctrination and real legislative insanity is all about.

    2. Re:The pledge is creepy... by TitaniumFox · · Score: 1

      Creepy? Where's a History & Moral Philosophy class when you need one. (Starship Troopers reference)

      It seems you didn't understand what you were reciting and why.

      "I pledge allegiance to the flag...and to the republic for which it stands...one nation...indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

      The Flag and our nation are connected.

      It's much more than simply "a piece of cloth," but only because of the symbolism behind it.

      You've got 13 stripes (7 red and 6 white) standing for the original colonies. White stars, one for each state, on a blue union. State... Union. The symbolism is obvious.

      If it means nothing to you, why not go down to your local VFW and ask them what the flag means to them.

      The USA. Freedom. Mom. Apple Pie. Whatever.

      They faught for it, too. The values the flag stands for are the same values that were in place during the birth of our country. Religious freedom. Self evident truthes. Inalienable rights.

      Freedom from oppression by The Man. ;)

      Sure, the Constitution is a living document open to interpretation. Sometimes we have more rights, sometimes fewer. If you've gotten too cushy in your marshmellow-fluff lifestyle, cutting political balogna so thin that you can read through it, try looking at just how many countries in this world give you the opportunity to even believe the way you do about the flag or the country, and still say "you've got the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

      What was impressed upon me during my 2 tours (military type) in Bosnia and 1 tour in Macedonia was the inescapable lack of freedom the people had. Culture shock. I had taken my rights for granted. I never really thought how good the US and the people who live there have it in comparison to some parts of the world.

      So. Your rights are there. Exercise them. Don't honor your flag, or do. The flag, though, is a symbol of the forum in which you get to exercise those rights. If you say you don't care, you should at least say it without ignorance.

      TiFox

      --
      -- I'd say your post was about 3 monkeys, 18 minutes.
    3. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Skyshadow · · Score: 2
      The problem, of course, is that many Americans cannot see past the symbols of America (pledges and flags) to realize what the real and important underlying concepts are.

      This is why so many people can't seem to grasp, say, that banning flag burning is essentially unamerican -- protecting a symbol at the expense of what that symbol represents. Generations of Americans haven't lived and died to protect the flag, but to protect the freedoms it represents. Until the sophistication level of the "average" American rises to the level where this is no longer an issue, this point remains very important.

      BTW, saying "If you think the US is bad, check out China" is so incredibly misconcieved that I'm having trouble figuring out a suitable response. It's like saying "You might think our dump is bad, but Shelbyville's dump is *really* smelly". Maybe so, but I still don't want to live there.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    4. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never liked the Pledge all that much, either, for the same reason. I MUCH prefer the oath I took repeatedly while in the US Air Force, in which I swore to:
      "...support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic..."

      This, BTW, is similar to the oaths of most political offices. Wouldn't it be great if they all lived up to it?

      DaemonHero, MSgt, USAF (Ret)

    5. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try to consider other people. Symbols which may mean nothing to you are very important to them. For example, I would say that wearing white sheets and burning a wooden cross in the street in front of someone's home is not a matter of free speech, since it is a fairly direct threat.

    6. Re:The pledge is creepy... by jafac · · Score: 2

      I believe that on the 4th of July, we should ALL burn an American flag - to celebrate the fact that we're FREE to do so.

      Not only will it drive the point home to the fuckers in Washington, but it will also turn the act of flag burning from an act of protest into an act of patriotism.

      Damn. When I'm Emporer, it will be so. Trust me on this.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    7. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Little Boy] Hey, who left all this garbage on the steps of Congress? [Amendment] I'm not garbage I'm an amendment to be Yes, an amendment to be And I'm hoping that they'll ratify me There's a lot of flag-burners who have got too much freedom I want to make it legal for policemen to beat 'em 'Cause there's limits to our liberties At least, I hope and pray that there are 'Cause those liberal freaks go too far [Little Boy] But why can't we just make a law against flag burning? [Amendment] Because that law would be unconstitutional But if we change the constitution - [Little Boy] - Then we could make all sorts of crazy laws! [Amendment] Now you're catching on! [Little Boy] But what if they say you're not good enough to be in the constitution? [Amendment] Then I'll crush all opposition to me! And I'll make Ted Kennedy pay If he fights back, I'll say that he's gay [Congressman] Good news, amendment! They ratified you! You're in the US Constitution! [Amendment] Oh, yeah! Door's open, boys!

    8. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 2

      Not to mention no good Christian should stand for it either... I mean I Pledge Allegiance to the Flag seems clearly contradictory to the false idol commandment. I know Jehovah's Witnesses won't pledge allegiance, and I believe a number of other fundamentalist Christians believe similarly.

    9. Re:The pledge is creepy... by raistlinne · · Score: 2
      Repeating the pledge, every day in school, over and over, seems an awfully lot like an attempt to indoctrinate children, instead of educating them.

      What the hell do you think that education is? Education is the forcible stuffing of ideas into children, often against their will. Besides, why is it so unreasonable to ask citizens of a country to be loyal to it (hint: the flag stands for the country, it's a thing called a "symbol")?

      --
      They laughed at Einstein. They laughed at the Wright Brothers. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown. -- C. Sagan
    10. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Agreed! Pledging to a piece of cloth is dumb. Yeah, I'm in love with my wife's gloves. That's it. Right.

      When I pledge, I recite it like this:

      I pledge allegiance to the Constitution of the United States of America, and to the country which is founded upon it...

      The rhythm works quite well, and it reflects what is truly great about the USA: a Constitution that tries to prevent the abuse of power.

    11. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely. In a country where freedom of ideas and beliefs are supposed to be welcome (and even encouraged), we seem to have more concern for the object which represents freedom (the flag).

    12. Re:The pledge is creepy... by joshki · · Score: 1
      those fuckers in Washington

      You know, maybe you should consider who you lump into that group.

      I serve proudly in the US military. Almost every man in my entire extended family has served in the military, in just about every military action since WW1 (except the Persian Gulf -- I was too young by about 3 years). That flag is a symbol of what we've fought for since 1776. When you burn it you spit in our faces and stomp on our graves.

      Fuckers like you piss me off. You have no comprehension of what freedom means. Yeah, you're free to burn an american flag -- but only because people like me are willing to die to protect that freedom. Doesn't that strike you as a little odd? Maybe just a bit insulting to us?

      When you burn our flag, you revile the very "freedom" that you profess to value so highly.

      If you want to understand what freedom is, volunteer. Help someone else. Make your pitiful existence useful for a change.

      I'll end this with a quote from Voltaire: I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

      That's my motto, but it still pisses me off to hear fuckers like you spout.

      --
      I do not read or respond to AC's. If you want a discussion, log in. Otherwise, don't waste your time.
    13. Re:The pledge is creepy... by egon · · Score: 1

      Careful how you phrase this - Education is not the "forcible stuffing of ideas into children, often against their will."

      The US concept of school, and the required attendance thereof is the forcible stuffing of ideas into children, often against their will.

      There are plenty of ways to educate (children/adults/whomever) that does not follow the above.

      --
      Give a man a match, you keep him warm for an evening.
      Light him on fire, he's warm for the rest of his life
    14. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Too bad, in other countries it almost became an international pictogram for "foreign oppressors".

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    15. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not the flag, oh lost soul, it is what the flag stands for. That apparently being lost to you the rest of your post deserves no comment.

    16. Re:The pledge is creepy... by sulli · · Score: 2
      I don't think jafac was referring to you when he talked about "those fuckers." While I would not burn a flag as a show of patriotism - at least not yet, not while Bush, Ashcroft, et al. at least pretend to respect the Constitution - I definitely feel that he can if he wants to.

      Those he opposes (I suspect - I don't know him, though he is my Friend) are those who are systematically destroying our liberty, and I oppose them too. I choose to fly my flag, as I feel it stands for something beyond Ashcroft, but that's my choice.

      Oh, and as I am in California, I look forward to the NEW Pledge of Allegiance. Time to find a meeting at City Hall to say it at!

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    17. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Chasuk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I serve proudly in the US military.

      So did I, for a decade. We have at least that much in common.

      ...(except the Persian Gulf -- I was too young by about 3 years).

      Our first difference. I served in the Persian Gulf.

      That flag is a symbol of what we've fought for since 1776.

      True enough. However, note the word symbol in that sentence.

      When you burn it you spit in our faces and stomp on our graves.

      Our first major difference. When you burn the flag, you destroy by fire a piece of muli-hued fabric. Nothing less, nothing more.

      Fuckers like you piss me off. You have no comprehension of what freedom means. Yeah, you're free to burn an american flag -- but only because people like me are willing to die to protect that freedom. Doesn't that strike you as a little odd? Maybe just a bit insulting to us?

      Dumbasses like you piss me off. You, and everyone like you who seem unable to distinguish between a symbol and the real liberty and freedom which that symbol represents.

      Ban the burning of the flag today. Ban the burning of the Bible tomorrow. Ban the burning of the Koran next week. Then let's ban the burning of the Book of Mormon, Scientology's various copyrighted works, the writings of Mary Baker Eddy and Ellen G. White and Edgar Cayce and the Bab and Karl Marx and Martin Luther King Jr. and John F.Kennedy.

      I say that those who are offended easily deserve to be offended.

      That's my motto, but it still pisses me off to hear dumbasses like you spout.

    18. Re:The pledge is creepy... by joshki · · Score: 1

      You're probably right. He probably didn't mean what he said to refer to me. But it's a slap in the face of every person in military service to suggest that burning a flag is a patriotic statement. What I do is a patriotic statement -- if you want to make a statement, serve your country in some way, don't try to piss off the people who guarantee your freedoms by burning their flag.

      --
      I do not read or respond to AC's. If you want a discussion, log in. Otherwise, don't waste your time.
    19. Re:The pledge is creepy... by joshki · · Score: 1

      You might have noticed that I did not suggest banning anything.

      --
      I do not read or respond to AC's. If you want a discussion, log in. Otherwise, don't waste your time.
    20. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU DIDN'T FIGHT FOR A FLAG.

      You can buy a flag almost anywhere. It's a piece of cloth. Burning it doesn't slap you in the face unless you're a moron who takes irrelevant things far too seriously.

      When someone burns a US flag, surprisingly enough, they aren't ACTUALLY burning the US. Wow!

      So, you didn't fucking fight and watch your friends die for a fucking piece of cloth. You fought and suffered to protect your COUNTRY and your friends and family.

      Fucking idiots, getting all worked up over a symbol.

      George Carlin: I consider them symbols, and I leave symbols to the symbol-minded.

    21. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe you should have opened your goddam ears when you recited it everyday in school, over and over.

      i pledge alegience, to the flag of the united states of america, and to the republic, for which it stands...

      how did this get modded up to a 5?

    22. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 2

      why is it so unreasonable to ask citizens of a country to be loyal to it

      The connotation of the word allegiance goes somewhat beyond legal obligation. What does it mean for you personally to pledge allegiance to someone? To me, pledging allegiance to something is an expression of absolute loyalty. To me, it means that I will support that entity in its actions regardless of what those actions may be. Anyways, perhaps it would be better for the members of our government to pledge allegiance to the citizens rather than having us pledge allegiance to our republic.

    23. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 2

      Without getting into semantics, both you and the parent have valid points. One expresses by patriotism by protecting the symbol of the nation, the other expresses it by burning that symbol as a deliberate expression of the rights that symbol represents.

      My question: You ended your post with a quote from Voltaire, "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." Are you saying honestly and truthfully that you are willing to defend, to the death if necessary, the right/privilege to burn a flag? Or are you indicating your willingness to defend, to the death if necessary, the poster's right to say what he said in his post sans actual flag burning. Considering that Americans are in favor of outlawing flag burning nearly 2 to 1, it may not be long before this controversial act of expression is deemed illegal.

    24. Re:The pledge is creepy... by ignipotentis · · Score: 1

      The flag is what represents that freedom that you seem to cherish so much. That flag was the rallying point under which many people died to protect that freedom that you are using to give your opinions. I think the least you could do is respect what that flag stands for. On a side note, take a small trip to Arlington National Cemetary, and see if you still think that flag is a waste of time.

      --
      Don't waste time... procrastinate now!
    25. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Yunzil · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Almost every man in my entire extended family has served in the military, in just about every military action since WW1 (except the Persian Gulf -- I was too young by about 3 years). That flag is a symbol of what we've fought for since 1776. When you burn it you spit in our faces and stomp on our graves.

      I think you need to ask those men in your family exactly WHAT they were fighting for. What they should have been fighting for is our freedom of expression, and that expression includes burning the flag if you see fit.

      When you burn our flag, you revile the very "freedom" that you profess to value so highly.

      Nope, just the opposite in fact; you are *exercising* that freedom.

    26. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Storm+Damage · · Score: 1

      More than just indoctrination, it's a concious act of nationalization. Until the latter part of the 19th century, most Americans held allegiance to their State above allegiance to the Union as a whole. That was a large part of what the Civil War was about. Several states and their citizens felt that if the Federal Government enacted laws which severely impacted the rights of States to govern themselves and their citizens, then those states should be able to secede from the Union. Regardless of my feelings about some of the issues which led to secession, I believe a state should reserve this right. Pride in their statehood, and bristling at the loss of their independence from the Federal Government is what motivates many southern citizens to fly the Confederate Flag even to this day (Many are also racist, and there is an unfortunate mixing of ideals there, which are troublesome to explain, and have kept me from flying a Southern Cross on my own lawn)

      Children who have grown up pledging Allegiance to the Stars and Bars think of themselves as Citizens of America rather than Citizens of Michigan, or Tennessee, or Florid or New York. It's a matter of identity, and we're growing from thinking of the United States as a loose confederation of cooperating State governments (the way the Federal Government was originally designed to operate), as a tight unified nation where the individual states are somewhat less important. This has advantages and disadvantages, and it's not clear how far the trend will go, or how reversible it may turn out to be if the disadvantages outweigh the advantages.

      There are a few places in the country where the identity of statehood is still held more sacred than others. Texas is a good example. That's the only state that has written into its Constitution a provision that the State flag be given equal treatment to the National flag (the treaty which admitted Texas to the Union required this provision to be allowed, as it otherwise is against federal law. In all other states, the state flag cannot be larger or be flown as high as the Stars and Stripes). And when I went there, I couldn't help but notice it. Those Texans can fly a flag, I tell you! I personally believe that as a matter of pride, Texans sew together the largest American flag they possibly can, just so they can fly a Lone Star that big right next to it. Every car dealership in Dallas flies a pair of flags which can be seen for miles away. Somewhere it's probably written that the optimal Texas flag can be seen from space.

    27. Re:The pledge is creepy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are supposed to get all weepy when you see the flag, and feel wow - how lucky I am to be living here in this country. How unlucky everyone else in the world is to not be living here. And gosh darn it, I'm PROUD that everyone else isn't lucky enough to live here,
      erm, I mean I'm PROUD that I was born here. PROUD, I say, to be an American. And remember "American" includes I CAN. I don't remember what the AMER part means in that but it must be something about the flag, which, by the way, I'm weeping when I think about it. I'm so lucky to be living here that, hmm, I'm going to the casino.

  53. Good. by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Beyond the phrasing issue, I don't think we should try to install patriotism by forcing people to recite a paragraph over and over again.

    I would much prefer that our citizens be educated in what's good about America and what's unique about being a citizen so they can fight to keep it a place they should be willing to defend. I'm talking about things like civil rights -- due process, free speech, etc. Our children should be educated in why these things are important even when they're inconvenient (there are a lot of seemingly educated people who don't get this at all).

    Again, something that makes America worth the effort is the fact that we don't have to put up with the government telling us what to believe. The Pledge is just hot air, but our *rights*, the ability to exercise those rights and the defense of those rights is critical to our continuing existance as something special and worthwhile. Without those, we're just another despotic country masquerading as a republic. The world has quite enough of those.

    Again, some people think this country is special because of symbols like the flag or the pledge or the anthem. Personally, what I love and fear the loss of are the rights which those things represent.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  54. Stuff that matters? by cruachan · · Score: 0, Troll

    i think not

  55. Re:R. Kelly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so that less people will be offended.. i myself am a cracker

  56. A small step by photon317 · · Score: 2

    ... but more needs to be done. This is an excellent precedent, and I hope it stands the test of time. Religion invades our government in far too many places - could this be the start of a move back towards proper seperate of church and state?

    --
    11*43+456^2
    1. Re:A small step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      give me a freaking break. tell me; how has religion invaded government?

    2. Re:A small step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Swearing on the Bible when I'm in court. Swearing on the Bible when I'm the President. Praying at the beginning of every session of Congress. Religious statements placed on our currency. Being unable to file a joint tax return unless I go through some arcane ceremony in front of some priest or proxy-priest in a courtroom. Or was that rhetorical?

  57. Why Do We Need A "Pledge of Allegiance"? by rizzo · · Score: 2

    It just seems like making kids stand up and pledge their allegiance to a country is something you'd hear about in totalitarian societies who are paranoid that their kids will grow up to be enemies of the State. Of course in communist-paranoid McCarthy-ism 1950s USA that may have been the case. It just seems out of place in todays society. Perhaps because of the disillusionment and rampant cynicism of today's people, myself included.

    That said, I am glad to see the "under God" go. I'm a Catholic who goes to church every Sunday and sings in the church choir (seriously), but I'm a firm believer in the separation of church and state. And although another comment was marked Funny, I do think the "In God We Trust" on U.S. currency should be removed.

    --

    "More organs means more human." - Zim

    1. Re:Why Do We Need A "Pledge of Allegiance"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not the only one who thinks that. In Germany, I hear that displays of patriotism are so tainted with echoes of Nazism that Germans cringe when they come here and see pledges of allegiance conducted in schools.

      Yeah, the currency thing is also a pretty overt establishment of religion. Off the top of my head, here are some others:

      - Prayer at the beginning of every session of Congress
      - The President's hourly "God Bless America!" proclamation, sometimes uttered for no reason at all
      - State recognition of marriage (not religious? hope you don't mind if I'm gay. or a polygamist. or i like my first cousin a whole lot)
      - State promotion of marriage, programs to "strengthen" marriage (he only hits you because he loves you! think of the children!)

      And yes, I'm married. My wife is religious, I'm not.

  58. This most certainly will be held up... by The_THOMAS · · Score: 1

    I'll donate my own money, which after this case is sealed, will be taken to court as unconstitutional for having that fictional character on it too!

    Here's some history on "God" and money.

    --
    Ya Sure! You Betcha!, The_THOMAS
  59. Face the Flag time by fliplap · · Score: 2

    Not that this will stop anything. Its long been established, that as long as a religous activity isn't faculty lead, the students are free to discuss and organize as they wish.

    So now instead of requiring students to say the pledge they will simply have "Face the Flag and say something" time. Of course, the students won't feel and pressure from peers or teachers because 3rd and 4th grade children usually think completely for themselves and aren't influenced by the behavior of thier peers.

    But, I am glad that it is gone, I never liked saying it and was always annoyed and offended when I was forced to. Kudos!

  60. Reminder to everyone by Aexia · · Score: 2

    1. The ruling only strikes down the 1954 law which added "under God" to the Pledge.

    2. "God" isn't mentioned anywhere in the Constitution. Go read it.

    And if you don't thinking it's a big deal, what if it said "One nation under Allah"? Imagine the outcry from conservatives then!

  61. Don't expect it to last by ajakk · · Score: 2

    Don't expect this holding to last. This decision was made by a three judge division of the Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. The government could next file a motion for rehearing and rehearing en banc. The motion for rehearing will ask the three judges to look at the decision again because the missed something. The judges will turn that down. The rehearing en banc will ask all of the judges in the circuit to hear the case and rule on it. The government will file for rehearing en banc if they think the overall composition of the court is more "conservative" than the one that gave the ruling today.

    Assuming that those motions are not made, or are denied, it will go to the Supreme Court. Don't expect the Supreme Court to uphold this decision. The current Supreme Court is moderately conservative even if some of the judges who were appointed by Republicans wouldn't show it. Renquist, Scalia, and Thomas will follow their usual pattern of voting together and they will keep it in. Ginsburg and Breyer could go the other way. Kennedy and O'Conner should both vote to keep it in even though they are both sorta unpredicatable (especially good ole Sandra). Souter and Stevens will also probably vote for it to stay in. So, there are three definately for keeping it, two who are probably against, and four who could go either way, but will most likely vote for.

    Sorry for the rambling, and oh yeah, IANAL(Y).

  62. Interesting argument by xTown · · Score: 1
    This ruling actually passes my own litmus test regarding the establishment clause. If this wording of the pledge is indeed codified in US law as passed by Congress, then it is clearly unconstitutional and the phrase "under God" should indeed be removed.


    "Congress shall make no law..." has always been the key for me. I tend not to endorse the idea of the so-called "separation of church and state". Nativity displays in public parks? Fine. Christmas trees in the state house? Great. I've always been of the opinion that the idea behind "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" was simple: the founders didn't want there to be an official state religion, the way there was in England. Period.


    Inserting "under God" where there was none previously does indeed seem to be de jure establishment of religion. It will be interesting to see where this goes.

    1. Re:Interesting argument by kc0dxh · · Score: 1

      So, which religeon is established as a state religeon with this wording?

      --

      --- "1.21 Jigawatts!" -Doc

  63. YOU, SIR, ARE A RETARD. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or Madame, should such be the case.

  64. Declaration of Independance by ocie · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is now uncostitutional as well.

    Oh my.

    --
    JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    1. Re:Declaration of Independance by rizzo · · Score: 2

      Although the Declaration of Independence (1776) was written before the Constitution (1787). Besides the Declaration of Independance is not a living document, where as the Constitution is, in my opinion. The DoI was a one-time shot telling the King of England that we (USA) didn't answer to him anymore. And that was the end of it. The Constitution, on the other hand, is the set of rules which govern all of our laws and regulations to this day. This is the reason Congress would amend the Constitution. Amending the Delcaration of Independence would be quite silly and pointless.

      --

      "More organs means more human." - Zim

    2. Re:Declaration of Independance by eddeye · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Declaration of Independence can't be unconstitutional: it's not a legal document. All it does is inform the world that we are free of English rule, with a long list of grievances against the king.

      The DoI establishes no form of government. It defines no laws. The body of the DoI can't be used as evidence or precedent in a court case. Further the DoI predates the Constitution by 13 years, so the Continental Congress that produced the DoI can't be subject to it. Constitutionality simply doesn't apply.

      You might as well declare the Articles of Confederation unconstitutional.

      --
      Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch.
    3. Re:Declaration of Independance by Dirtside · · Score: 2

      Thanks for letting everyone on /. know that you don't know what it means for something to be unconstitutional, or even that you have the most basic understanding of logic or even the flow of time.

      The Declaration of Independence was written *before* the Constitution. The 1st Amendment says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion..." The DoI was not written by Congress. It was not a law. It was merely the colonies telling the King of England, "Fuck off, wanker, we want our independence."

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    4. Re:Declaration of Independance by ocie · · Score: 2

      And thank you for letting everyone know you didn't get the joke.

      --
      JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    5. Re:Declaration of Independance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop complaining about the moderation system. It's the best system we have!

    6. Re:Declaration of Independance by Kymermosst · · Score: 2

      Wrong.

      To quote the Constitution, Article VI: "All Debts contracted and Engagements entered into, before the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United States under this Constitution as under the Confederation."

      The Declaration of Independence falls under the category of "Engagement entered into."

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    7. Re:Declaration of Independance by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Huh? Declaration of Independence is a declaration, one-sided document that indicates a position and places no obligation on anyone.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    8. Re:Declaration of Independance by ScottForbes · · Score: 1
      Huh? Declaration of Independence is a declaration, one-sided document that indicates a position and places no obligation on anyone.

      ...except that said document takes the position "whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these [rights], it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it," and uses that position to justify the existence of the United States Government. Some people believe that taking this position places certain obligations upon the U.S. government, namely that the government must honor said rights, or else lose its moral authority to govern.

      You might want to re-read the Declaration of Independence before making any more broad, sweeping statements about it; it's not just a list of complaints about British rule. It also contains some fundamental declarations about the role of government and the rights of the individual, and those declarations, in principle and practice, remain in force.

  65. Will probably be overturned by elsegundo · · Score: 1

    According to the article on CNN's web site, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, who rules in this case, is the most liberal and the most overturned appeals court in the U.S.

    --


    The revolution will be televised. Blackout restrictions apply.
  66. Put yourself in somebody else's shoes by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
    How many of those who think this should be constitutional have ever lived for some period among people of another religion?

    It's not a big deal, but the world will be that much better a place if the majorities everywhere show a little sensitivity to the minorities. This ruling does not mean anybody cannot say "so help me God" or "one Nation under God" or whatever you please. It means that your Government cannot require children of another religion to recite it. Is that really so much to ask? Think about it - the kids will either recite along and not really mean it, or just silently omit that phrase. I didn't grow up in the US, but that's exactly what I did. So what did requiring me to mouth these really gain except some resentment?

    1. Re:Put yourself in somebody else's shoes by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      So only christians can be patriotic now?

      Geez, that's smart.

      Personally I think money, religion and country borders should be abolished just for this sort of reason... stupid made up divisions...

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  67. If you would actual research your opinions... by jaaron · · Score: 1

    You would find out that it is ILLEGAL to FORCE someone to recite the pledge of allegiance. This was determined by the Supreme Court and most of the articles about this new decision point that out. I agree that just reciting the pledge does little to nothing to help to proper patriotism, however, think about it this way: what if you didn't have to recite it? Would you remember it? Would you care? Is it a BAD thing to remind students, at least indirectly, once a day that they are part of a larger whole and they have a responsibility to be an active citizen? Forcing to recite a pledge is one thing, encouraging public awareness of your nation and a duty towards it is another.

    --
    Who said Freedom was Fair?
    1. Re:If you would actual research your opinions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I belive very strongly in the fundumental principles of "Freedom" and "Justice", unfortunatly the US government (or any other government for tht matter) is NOT dedicated to defending those principles. Just look at the PATRIOT Act. Do you think Congress or the President had civil liberties in mind when they passed that? For the moment, the US probably offers it's citizens the most freedom of any other country, but the moment that changes or the government blatently violates the it's own supposed principles my loyalty will be revoked.


      In short, I will pledge my allegence to the spirit of America, the ideals that so many have fought and died for, but NOT to any government (ie. "The Rpublic for which it stands ...")

  68. Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by mgpeter · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Federalist Papers is a book that contains the letters of our founding fathers during the writing of the constitution. In it there are many concerns of what "Seperation of Church and State" actually means.

    Sep of Church & State was included, because at the time there were many countries that were actually ruled by the church elders, our founding fathers did not want this, so they added it to the constitiution. It was in no way meant to take all religion out of the government, it was included to ensure that the heads of the church would not rule the government.

    I don't know when the press or lawyers or whoever construed it into what it is today. Anyway, don't take my word for it, actually read the book at Project Gutenberg

    1. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by Noexit · · Score: 1

      Thank you for bringing up this point and the Papers. It is so rarely brought up in the arguement. In the language that was used by our founding fathers in their documents and speeches at the time it is clear where they stand on God, religion and government.

      --

      Never argue with a man carrying a water buffalo

    2. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by fermion · · Score: 2

      That is one interpretation. There are other intepretations. For instance, some would say that as a consequence of the ruler being of one religion, people of other religions were persecuted, tortured, and killed. To escape this persecution, people came to America. Unfortunately, the early settlers sometimes killed people who did not agree with thier religous beliefs. A strict seperation of church and state minimizes the validation of those murders and allows all people to worship, or not, as they wish.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    3. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by Zeinfeld · · Score: 3, Informative
      Sep of Church & State was included, because at the time there were many countries that were actually ruled by the church elders, our founding fathers did not want this, so they added it to the constitiution. It was in no way meant to take all religion out of the government, it was included to ensure that the heads of the church would not rule the government.

      Actually it was as much determined the other way. In England at the time the Bishops sat in the House of Lords and the Monarch was 'supreme govenor' of the Church of England. The pilgrim fathers were mainly non-conformists who had come to the Americas to escape the established church which they saw as making God's church subject to the will of the state.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    4. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by The+Evil+Troll+King · · Score: 1

      I haven't read all of the Federalist Papers, but I've read a lot of the good stuff. It's clear that the United States in 2002 isn't what our founders had imagined. The problem is that the Federalist Papers, for better or for worse (or for better and for worse) are not part of the Constitution and is not legally binding in any way whatsoever. Occasionally, Justices look to the Federalist Papers (or other external sources) for wisdom, but the actual basis of their decision ought to be rooted in the Constitution itself.

      I don't know when the press or lawyers or whoever construed it into what it is today.

      "Whoever" is the Supreme Court itself. From Lemon v. Kurtzman:

      "Every analysis in this area must begin with consideration of the cumulative criteria developed by the Court over many years. Three such tests may be gleaned from our cases. First, the statute must have a clear secular purpose; second, it's principal or primary effect must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion; finally, the statute must not foster an excessive government entanglement with religion."

      The Supreme Court has been gradually backing down from that (very strict) position ever since Lemon, but they've never managed to agree on anything else, and therefore haven't been able to establish a good precedent to replace Lemon. So, expect lots of Establishment Clause controversy in the future.

      Steve

    5. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by coyote-san · · Score: 2

      They also had some serious practical considerations. They couldn't hold public office, or public service jobs, or attend university, or participate in many other sectors of public life. Life was great if you wanted to remain a serf on the lord's (with a little 'l') land, but if you wanted anything better for your children and grandchildren you needed to get out of there.

      --
      For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
    6. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obvious troll:

      Does that mean that anything out of date and no longer relevant should be left as is? Think redundant laws when you answer this question.

    7. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by eddeye · · Score: 1

      >there were many countries that were actually ruled by the church elders, our founding fathers did not want this, so they added it to the constitiution. It was in no way meant to take all religion out of the government

      What the founding fathers believed and/or wanted is completely irrelevant. They weren't Gods, deities, or ubermensch. They weren't perfect. They did a pretty damn good job, but their 18th century world view was completely different from how we see the world today.

      The key to our nation's success has been the ability to adapt with the times. Slavish devotion to what the "founding fathers" believed would mean:

      1) Women don't get to vote.
      2) Women can't hold public office.
      3) First two also hold for men of non-western-European descent.
      4) Slavery is still legal (not all, but many held slaves).
      5) Men who don't own fifty acres of property can not vote.

      and on and on. My point is not that the founding fathers were "evil"; they lived in a different world. My point is, you can't mindlessly invoke the founding fathers as the final arbitors of every issue. You have to think, to reason about the issue in today's society, how to best preserve the principles of freedom and tolerance that Americans love. THAT is the real lesson to be learned from the founding fathers: an enlightened society can tackle any problem equitably.

      "No society can make a perpetual constitution or even a perpetual law... The earth belongs ot the living and not to the dead." -- Thomas Jefferson

      --
      Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch.
    8. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by eddeye · · Score: 1

      >The Federalist Papers is a book that contains the letters of our founding fathers during the writing of the constitution.

      Furthermore, if these are the same Federalist papers I'm familiar with, it's a very biased sample. Three authors do NOT compromise the sum total of our founding fathers' beliefs. Hamilton and Jay were committed monarchists for christ's sake! Hardly good role models for American principles.

      --
      Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch.
    9. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but why would someone who is not a Christian want to be subject to a government whose decisions are shaped by Christian doctrine?

    10. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by kirkjobsluder · · Score: 1

      It is also worth noting that the Federalist Papers were not representative of the entire constitutional convention but a nice work of post-colonial propaganda advocating for a much more conservative view of the Constitution than what was actually passed. It is also worth noting that the authors of the First Amendment not only put some pretty harsh language ("Congress shall make no law regarding an establishment of religion, or restricting the free practice thereof") in regards to defining the relationship of government and religion, but they also soundly rejected accommodationist drafts of the First Amendment that would specifically endorse government funds for religious observance.

    11. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by Bill_Mische · · Score: 1

      "In England at the time the Bishops sat in the House of Lords" - they still do

      "the Monarch was 'supreme govenor' of the Church of England" - she still is

      "The pilgrim fathers were mainly non-conformists" - yes but other colonies (Maryland?) were set up by Catholics and even amoungst the non-conformists there were disagreements. My understanding of your 1st amendment was to allow all the various Christian sects to co-exist.

      --
      Boring Old Fart (40, married, 3 kids...er no...make that 49, married, 3 grown up kids...it's been a long time)
    12. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would someone who is a Christian want to be subject to a government whose decisions are shaped by non-Christian doctrine?

    13. Re:Has anyone read the Federalist Papers ! by haa...jesus+christ · · Score: 1

      Good points, but would you be willing to concede that opening the floodgates, even if just enough for a trickle, significantly increases the chance of a torrent? I realize that most people can't cut their lives into discrete packages (or we'd all be badass cyborgs like bill leeb, but I digress), but I find it difficult not to do so with issues of government. Objectivity is required in pluralistic socieities, or as much as possible. And we're not all religious or monotheists either....

  69. God could give a shit... get over it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EOM...

  70. s/god/$deity/g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yet another example of the zionist conspiracy!!!!

  71. From the Perspective of a Student by opti6600 · · Score: 0

    I'm a high school student who hasn't been reciting the Pledge for years on basis that it infringes on my political and religious rights. I am an Atheist, and one who doesn't particularly believe in the direction in which our government is heading.

    I'm happy to see this happening. In my opinion, its bad enough that most school-age children are programmed by organized religion to believe what they say, and not what they want to believe. But to see the government, which is supposed to support the secular nature of the Constitution, instill a religious belief, especially one of a particular branch of religion, is shocking, and always has been to me.

    I go to a fairly liberal science and technology magnet school, and I'm sure there will be endless debate over this, but the one majority opinion will certainly be to eliminate that phrase from the , if not the entire, Pledge of Allegiance.

    1. Re:From the Perspective of a Student by Raven1 · · Score: 1

      wow, you're an ignorant shit. But we love you anyway. You think organized religion programs kids? Look at your school. Figure out what *you're* being programmed to believe.

    2. Re:From the Perspective of a Student by King_TJ · · Score: 2

      Yeah... I can actually see it both ways.

      (I'm not arguing that the "under God" part belongs in there. Personally, I feel that it doesn't. I also realize that Einsenhower probably thought it was little more than a harmless gesture to have that added. Apparently, he sided with the Knight of Columbus's opinion that it made a nice addition to remind everyone that we should always be humble - and realize that our country, however powerful, was not the "end all, be all" by itself. Obviously though, people are reading a lot more than that into it, and it's offending people.)

      When I say "I can see it both ways", I mean this: None of us are being forced to remain U.S. citizens. Sure, we're born into the country, and we can't do much about that. But as we grow up, we have the ability to make choices. I think most of us feel rather comfortable in the U.S. -- at least enough that we don't want to move elsewhere. If we're going to keep our citizenship, then we should also be willing to agree to pledge our support for the system we live under. In other words, don't blindly accept things government does that you believe are wrong. Use the rights you've been granted (freedom of speech, freedom of the press, etc.) to speak out and try to get these things changed. Vote, too.

      I see the "Pledge of Allegiance" as nothing more than that.... a publically recited promise (and reminder) to do our part as a U.S. citizen. Don't forget the last part of that pledge. It's referring to "liberty and justice for all". Who among us can say we don't want those things?

      But, on the other hand, part of the very nature of our freedoms and rights in the U.S. includes the ability to choose not to recite such a thing. If you choose not to - I'm happy to defend that decision too. I just think maybe people look at it in the wrong light sometimes.

      - Tom

    3. Re:From the Perspective of a Student by the_greywolf · · Score: 1

      you yourself are programmed by atheist ideas, just as Christian children are programmed by Christian ideas, evolutionist students are programmed with evolutionist ideas. programming is the basis of the propogation of any idea. you name it.

      the government doesn't advocate the Judeo-Christian beliefs that it was founded on. it opens a door (one which can not be closed) for people of any religion to follow their own convictions, including Atheists.

      follow the advice of the Atheists yourself: "keep your beliefs to yourself and leave me alone!" (a statement i have heard more times than i'd like.) what you call for is the abolishment of a statement which enstills patriotism in the people who recite it daily; a patriotism that caused us to bring forward the WTC flag at the Winter Games at SLC2k2. that which you want to abolish is that which makes this country the country it is.

      --
      grey wolf
      LET FORTRAN DIE!
    4. Re:From the Perspective of a Student by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never had a liberal atheist trying to tell me that I can't play violent video games or watch porn...

    5. Re:From the Perspective of a Student by thales · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      "the government doesn't advocate the Judeo-Christian beliefs that it was founded on."

      I Would suggest that you study a little real history instead of the drivel the so called conservatives spout. The Philosphy of the 17th and 18th Centuries played a far larger role in the founding of the United States than "Judeo-Christian beliefs".

      I'll give you a big clue, in 1776 when that band of rebels were ready to formally break with England who did they select to lay the ideals that the new nation was fighting for on paper? Jefferson, a Deist, a man who openly admitted that he didn't beleave in the divinity of Jesus of Nazarath. Does that sound like the man who would be selected to launch a Christian nation?

      Pull a Dollar out of your wallet and look at the back, just under the pyramid, and you'll see the Latin phrase "novus ordo seclorum" A New Secular Order. The founders of the United States intended this to be a secular nation, NOT a Christian nation.

      John Locke had far more to do with the ideals of the USA than John and Luke.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    6. Re:From the Perspective of a Student by marhar · · Score: 2
      you'll see the Latin phrase "novus ordo seclorum" A New Secular Order.

      I think you're confused regarding the meaning of "seclorum". It actually means "world". There are plenty of online latin dictionaries where you can confirm this. Or google for novus ordo seclorum for sites that give a more detailed explanation of the phrase itself.

  72. Financial backing?! by Drogo+Knotwise · · Score: 1

    Otherwise, you do the same thing as the rest of the world will: you buy gold or euros.

  73. please??? by urmensch · · Score: 0

    why not?

    this ruling seems to follow the idea that church and state are seperate, and that seems to stand up in court fairly well.

    1. Re:please??? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Actually, it's likely not to stand and will provide a splendid opportunity to clarify whether the strict segregationists of church and state are correct or whether there is a legitimate public interest in promoting faith that is constitutional.

      Let's face it. If the strict segregationists were right, the first Congress would have never ponied up for chaplains for Senate and House, George Washington would have never declared national days of prayer, and the SC would never have had their own tradition of an opening prayer each day before court.

      The idea that a 3 judge panel 200 years+ after the passing of the constitution know better than the writers and all the intervening legislators, presidents, and judges is laughable.

    2. Re:please??? by khuber · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The idea that a 3 judge panel 200 years+ after the passing of the constitution know better than the writers and all the intervening legislators, presidents, and judges is laughable.

      Is that why women couldn't vote until the 1920s?

      Because of 144 years of infallible brilliance?

      Please.

      -Kevin

    3. Re:please??? by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      The right to vote was granted by amendment. Pray tell what was the amendment that made a general promotion of belief over unbelief unconstitutional? It isn't that the founders were infallible IMO, just that they knew what they were writing.

    4. Re:please??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Do as i say, not as i do"

    5. Re:please??? by Flower · · Score: 2

      Actually you are about to find that out at 9a.m. tomorrow morning when the SC rules on school choice. I think that is going to be the bell-weather in determining where this current ruling gets appealed to next.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
    6. Re:please??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps by this same argument civil rights would not have become an issue and slavery should still be legal because the fore fathers should have had the insight at the time to see this is wrong?

      Times change. We change. Truths of the past do not necessitate that they hold throughout time.

      "Well, that's the way it's always been done". What free thinking man holds this to be an untouchable truth? None I say. God gave us free will so that we may come to know our own truths. Free will is a bitch. The first sin is attributable to this. Had God sought to remove doubt, there would be no free will. All mankind would love him in the manner he dictated. I do not believe this was his desire. Like ourselves which are molded in his image, he wishes us to love him and worship him because we *want* to, not because someone told us to. This would be a false love, an insencire thing. It would have no meaning.

      Also remember, this country was founded by pioneers who sought refuge from persecution of their beliefs. One of this country's strenghts is that we allow people to believe or not believe, we do not need government to tell us what is the proper way to truth. God gave man free will for a reason. If you believe that God gave man free will, it also reasons that constructs of man should also allow this same freedom. To say otherwise seems almost arrogant in the assumption that you know best and your interpretation of God's will is correct. I believe both God and wise men understand this is a fallacy.

    7. Re:please??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the Romans had the right idea. Let's just throw 'em to the lions and let their god sort 'em out!

    8. Re:please??? by alcmena · · Score: 2

      Pray tell what was the amendment that made a general promotion of belief over unbelief unconstitutional?

      It's one of those little known ammendments, sometimes known as the 1st.

    9. Re:please??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that a 3 judge panel 200 years+ after the passing of the constitution know better than the writers and all the intervening legislators, presidents, and judges is laughable.

      Yeah, except that this particular issue was added in the 1950's...

      So one could logically say:

      "The idea that a small panel of paranoid anti-communists 150 years+ after the passing of the constitution know better than the writers and all the intervening legislators, presidents, and judges is laughable."

  74. Then conform...... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    You have two choices in life, you can go with the flow, ie conform, or you can be differnt. Changing the freaking rules is not an option. Why upset the rest of the country for a handful of people? Last time I checked majority rules buddy.

    1. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Last time I checked majority rules buddy.
      Then check again - the whole point of the Bill of Rights is to protect the minority from the collective will of the majority, particularly the individual. If everyone were to agree that you should be put to death for no reason, would that be OK?
    2. Re:Then conform...... by elmegil · · Score: 2
      1) There are more than "a handful" of non-monotheists in this country

      2) and more importantly, the whole structure of the constitution is meant to protect the minority's rights from being trampled by the majority.

      This is not changing the rules, it is enforcing them. Feel free to argue for a constitutional amendment to delete the part about "Congress shall make no law respecting an institution of religion", but until you've succeeded in getting such an amendment enacted, the rules say the current pledge is unconstitutional. So sad that it took nearly 50 years for anyone to succeed in making the rules stick. Sad, but hardly surprising: while we have some amazingly great ideals in the constitution, we hardly ever seem to live up to them.

      As long as the majority is in the mindset of "I've got mine, fuck you" as you seem to believe, we'll continue having these back-and-forth battles. There are two possible ends: everyone recognizes that the constitution is meant to protect everyone, not just the majority, or the constitution is abolished (or mutated to the point where it might as well be abolished).

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    3. Re:Then conform...... by dvdeug · · Score: 2

      Changing the freaking rules is not an option

      Why not? Congress, the courts, state legislatures, all have ways of changing the national rules. That's the whole point of Congress.

      majority rules

      Not in the US - read the Constitution. Pre-Amendments, it didn't even provide for people to elect senators or the president. The first amendements were added to prevent the majority from taking certain actions detrimental to the rights of minorities.

    4. Re:Then conform...... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

      There are more than "a handful" of non-monotheists in this country

      Hmmmm, think you aren't right on that. When you consider the fact that this country is made up of mostly, Christians, Jews and Muslims, all of whom are monotheisitic, while "handfull" might have been a poor choice in words you have to admit, there are comparatively few polytheisitcs and atheists.

      As for changing the rules, they are changing the status quo, a societal standard, a rule emposed or created by the population. This kinda crap always happens though, some whacko comes out of the woodwork and decries something. Things will go back to normal later.

    5. Re:Then conform...... by Master+Bait · · Score: 2
      It isn't majority rule here, it is the constitution that rules. Majority rule is mob rule. We are ruled by laws and not men.

      So if you want to change the constitution, that is indeed an option. But you need a very, very big mob and lots of time to think about it.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    6. Re:Then conform...... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Changing the freaking rules is not an option.

      What makes this nation something worth given allegience to, is exactly the fact that every four years or so, you can change the rules. It isn't easy, but it is possible. And how wonderful that we live in a country where this debate can go on, even though 80% of the people feel one way.
    7. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya gee there's only over a billion Hindus on the planet. That mean's one out of 6 people is polytheistic. Now in case you did't notice one of the fastest growing immegrant groups are indians, in case you didn't notice them working with you all over the IT industry. Hello? Ok now china, population 1 billion plus...mostly a buddhist country. Also after years as an atheistic communist country there are atheists mixed in there also. So that would make about 1 out of every 6 people on earth a buddhist. Ok ever seen that pretty much every major city in america has a china town? hello?

      I mean the god part of the pledge was only added when we where in the cold war against atheistic communists and we needed the kids brainwashed early. It won't kill america to take it out now that we don't have to worry about scary marxists capping ceo salaries.

      Anyways i supposed you are a monotheistic worshipper...so when your little kid comes home and says "Ganesha and Vishnu are going to protect me from capitalist exploiters!" i guess you won't be able to do anything to stop it huh? After all people that oppose religion in school are just wackos. Heh heh heh.

      It's ok as long as "Jesus is keeping me safe from commies"...uh oh wait till those evil immegrants start taking teaching jobs. Then the people clutching the bible like a security blanket will change their tune...

    8. Re:Then conform...... by SCHecklerX · · Score: 2

      All well and good, except the majority of people are stupid.

    9. Re:Then conform...... by Skyshadow · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Last time I checked majority rules buddy.

      Yup. I can't wait to hear what President Al Gore has to say on this.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    10. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why upset the rest of the country for a handful of people? Last time I checked majority rules buddy.

      Yeah why should we screw over all the plantation owners just so a couple niggers can be free...

    11. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If everyone were to agree that you should be put to death for no reason, would that be OK?

      I vote we kill the sucker. He is not worth keeping around here on earth. Lets send he to his GOD.

    12. Re:Then conform...... by elmegil · · Score: 1

      I see. So you'd prefer slavery, enforced religious attendance, and all those other fun things that are so traditional in western society, instead of people recognizing that forcing other people to be just like them really doesn't get you anywhere. Right?

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    13. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go away pedophile. Your type is not welcome here.

    14. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Last time I checked majority rules buddy.

      Majority rules - Tyranny of the majority

      Democracy - Majority rules with respect for the rights of the minority.

      Too bad we have too much of the former and not nearly enough of the latter.

      John Stuart Mills

    15. Re:Then conform...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked majority rules buddy

      Wrong.

      Is this what they are teaching in schools these days?

      Changing the rules clearly *is* an option. Why else do we make new laws, or amend the constitution? Just leave it to your intellectual betters to formulate the rules of society, and you just get back to God-bothering, watching TV, or whatever it is that you do ...

  75. An alternative. by fliplap · · Score: 1

    "One nation under god, or gods, or no god, or satan, or undecided, or whatever-you-damn-well-pleas with liberty and justice for all"

  76. God help our schools by octalgirl · · Score: 1

    I work in public schools and since 9/11 children have been respecting the flag, singing the National Anthem, and writing poems about peace. The timing of this decision is baffling. For many years now the pledge has been optional, and prayer has been replaced with a moment of silence. Teachers only ask that students stand quietly during this time, although it is difficult to find anyone who does not have a hand to heart and speaks the words proudly. Even exchange students from many nations and religions stand quietly with respect for the country that has welcomed them. To start your day with respect for your country, your school, and each other - why is that such a bad thing?

  77. It's not the "under God" part that's offensive by cartman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    State-sponsored pledges of allegiance are propagandistic, and exist to inspire collective feeling. That's not what America is about. It's not the "under God" part that bothers me, but rather the conscious attempt to instill loyalty in the young.

    State-sponsored pledges are attempts to form state-sponsored beliefs. The pledge of alleigance is not essentially different from the mandatory pledges of loyalty that are taken by the soldiers of various totalitarian regimes. We decry their pledges as propaganda, yet we require our own.

    I would rather see the pledge go by the wayside. The only expression of patriotism that is inspiring to me is one that is genuine and spontaneous.

    1. Re:It's not the "under God" part that's offensive by CyberLife · · Score: 1

      I am inclined to agree. I was always taught that loyalty was earned, never owed. Yet for some unexplained reason we're supposed to be loyal to this country simply because we're citizens. Just once I'd like to hear an explanation that doesn't also hold true in other parts of the world.

    2. Re:It's not the "under God" part that's offensive by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Genuine, yes. Spontaneous, not always. Inspiring, definitely. Every time I say it, I think about every word, and I thank God (in whom I happen to believe, though you're welcome to thank one of the laws of thermodynamics or the mitochondria in your cells) that I live in a country where I, a random kid, can find a large amount of liberty and justice.

      And what exactly is so offensive about this thing (sans "under God") anyway? Is liberty offensive? All we're saying is that we've got a really good thing going here, and we're willing to put out some effort to keep it going. Yikes.

    3. Re:It's not the "under God" part that's offensive by Mark+Bainter · · Score: 2
      State-sponsored pledges of allegiance are propagandistic

      All this really cracks me up. I see people on this site and elsewhere going on and on about indoctrination and propaganda over a few minutes of recitation each morning before school. Something that doesn't even happen in every public school to boot.

      Meanwhile, people are sending their kids to these schools every day for at least TWELVE YEARS where they'll be subjected to government propaganda for HOURS AT A TIME in the form of "history" and "political science" courses.

      I believe the famous phrase for this is "strain out a camel, but swallow a gnat".

      --
      "No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
      --James Madison
  78. It's worth noting... by taernim · · Score: 1

    ... that the Cali appeals court is the "most liberal and overturned" appeals court in the country.

    So it could go on from here and be overturned.

    --
    "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
  79. Pledge should be abolished by bedouin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The God part doesn't bother me, it's the fact that children from kindergarten on are generally forced by faculty to recite something that they don't truly grasp the meaning of. It's a form of indoctrination. Not to mention it's kind of hard to justify, since that 'justice' treated blacks as second class citizens until about 40 years ago. Oh, and never mind that whole Native American thing, stealing the land, etc.

    What a joke. There's no difference between having a group of children bow down and praise Jesus with rosary beads and making them essentially worship and give their allegiance to a stupid piece of fabric.

    If you feel like worshipping a flag do it at home, on your own time. It's one thing to have an individual decide he or she would like to pledge, it's another to MAKE them do it ritualistically every day, with no explanation other than "this is the right thing to do."

  80. Symbolism Strikes Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love it. This is great. I can't wait to watch this play itself out. People on both sides of this issue, getting WAY to hot and bothered about something of absolutly no substance... just a frickin symbol. People kill over symbols... what a lunatic race homo sapiens are.

    1. Re:Symbolism Strikes Again by Thoth+Ptolemy · · Score: 1

      To some (namely the right-wingers) the symbol is more important than the ideal or message.

      Take flag burning, as a use of freedom of expression. Yet right-wingers would have freedom of expression banned because it does so by damaging the symbol of that freedom.

      Hell...i've got money that says many religious right-wingers would put the symbols of their very faith above the deity. If their god came down and said "burn your crosses, your bibles, your church" they would sooner burn their own god...

  81. Majority rules..... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    Most people in this country are monotheistic, and since majority rules we have "In God we Trust". If you want to be in a Ahtiest country, go to China.

    1. Re:Majority rules..... by jmv · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most people in this country are monotheistic, and since majority rules we have "In God we Trust". If you want to be in a Ahtiest country, go to China.

      I thought the majority had ruled that there was going to be a separation of the state and the church. (note, I am not an Athiest) I too live in a country (Canada) where the majority is monotheistic yet kids don't have to say prayers (or "In God We Trust"-like plegde) at school anymore. Religion is back where it belongs: at home.

    2. Re:Majority rules..... by Skjellifetti · · Score: 1

      Poster must be from Alabama. Governor Fob James once said that the Constitution could not forbid school prayer because the Constitution did not apply to the states.

    3. Re:Majority rules..... by dvdeug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      majority rules

      Read the Constitution again. Pre-Amendments, it didn't provide for people to elect senators or the president. The first amendements were added to prevent the majority from taking certain actions detrimental to the rights of minorities. If you want to live in a country where majorities rule, I suggest you move, because the US isn't it.

    4. Re:Majority rules..... by goldmeer · · Score: 2
      Religion is back where it belongs: at home.

      And why isn't school where it belongs: at home? Why do you trust the education of your children to your government?

      I'm not starting a fight, I'm just attempting to get you to think.

    5. Re:Majority rules..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why trust ANYTHING to the government for that matter.

    6. Re:Majority rules..... by jmv · · Score: 2

      Why do you trust the education of your children to your government?

      If you don't trust the government (hence the school), why do you insist on having religion in school. Personally, I trust the school more than I trust the average parent... (though that's not a reason to rely only on the school)

      I'm not starting a fight, I'm just attempting to get you to think.

      I don't think that implying that everybody doesn't agree with you doesn't think is the best way to have a good discussion...

    7. Re:Majority rules..... by overturf · · Score: 1

      > And why isn't school where it belongs: at home?

      I could argue that I'm not qualified to instruct my children in all of the subjects they'll need to learn in order to excel in this world; or at least not to the depth which society will require.

      However, since religion really hasn't advanced much in the last few centuries, I'm reasonably capable of indoctrinating my children on that subject with only the help of my local parish.

    8. Re:Majority rules..... by gilroy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      And why isn't school where it belongs: at home? Why do you trust the education of your children to your government?

      (a) Because the typical parent lacks the time, energy, will, and training to successfully educate his/her child;

      (b) Because your children will live in society and should learn to move in it;

      (c) Because schools help us find common values and respect for values not held in common.


      Disclaimer: I am a schoolteacher (high school Physics) and you're darn-tooting that I feel my profession and I contribute to the general good.

    9. Re:Majority rules..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quite a few Christians don't, for this very good reason.

      By far the majority of small private and home schooled people I know have been Christian educated. We don't trust the government. We entirely DO expect it (and the rest of you) to declare us persona non grata and try to exterminate us at some point. We certainly don't trust you to faithfully raise our children.

    10. Re:Majority rules..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      read the constitution again. post-amendments, it still doesn't provide for people to elect the president.

    11. Re:Majority rules..... by goldmeer · · Score: 2
      If you don't trust the government (hence the school), why do you insist on having religion in school. Personally, I trust the school more than I trust the average parent... (though that's not a reason to rely only on the school)

      I do not insist on having religion in public school. I don't see where you got the idea that I do. Would you trust the government to raise the children of the citizens of the United States of America more than you would the average parent? Even if you do, are you advocating that the State should assume custody of all children *outside* standard school hours? After all, you don't trust "the average parent"

      I don't think that implying that everybody doesn't agree with you doesn't think is the best way to have a good discussion...

      Did I imply, or did you infer? :)

    12. Re:Majority rules..... by goldmeer · · Score: 1
      (a) Because the typical parent lacks the time, energy, will, and training to successfully educate his/her child;

      I disagree with all of these with the exception of will. The saying is very true in this instance: "If there is will, there is a way."

      (b) Because your children will live in society and should learn to move in it;

      Can you tell me how a public school environment has any bearing on the realities of society? If anything, anecdotal evidence shows that there is a huge adjustment needed after the end of public school in order to "fit in" to either collegiate or professional society. If you refer to the ability to interact with others in a casual, unstructured setting (hanging out) in wich case, I would have to assert that there is nothing in a public school setting that imparts this on students.

      (c) Because schools help us find common values and respect for values not held in common.

      Are you kidding?
      Are you suggesting that public schools help identify anything about values or respect? The only values that public schools impart are situational and relative. The only repect that public schools foster is blind respect for authority.

      Disclaimer: I am a schoolteacher (high school Physics) and you're darn-tooting that I feel my profession and I contribute to the general good.

      Great! Physics is the cornerstone of science. However, it has very little to do with values, respect (aside for the respect of the great minds of history) or religion.

      I find it interesting that you use the term "general good" since that is the "in" term for "general welfare" that the constitution actually calls for the federal government to provide. I personally feel that the citizens of the USA would benefit to realize that "public school" is in essence "educational welfare." I find it interesting that a citizen that would not want to be on financial welfare for any period of time has no issue against having their children on "educational welfare" for their entire primary education.

      Just as the social workers that handle the financial welfare infrastructure contribute to "the general good" so do public school teachers. Right now, we couldn't do without you. Keep the faith.

    13. Re:Majority rules..... by dbrutus · · Score: 2

      Actually strict segregation of religion and state has never been popular. It's always had appeal to minority elites only. Nobody wants to break the truce of religious peace between the many faiths of this country but pretty much everybody knows how to make non-sectarian prayers. When a new religion comes up with a formula that is superior in its non-sectarian nature its quite likely that the others will accomodate the new formula into their repertoire, not start a conflict over it.

      Atheists just like to pick a fight.

    14. Re:Majority rules..... by goldmeer · · Score: 1
      I could argue that I'm not qualified to instruct my children in all of the subjects they'll need to learn in order to excel in this world; or at least not to the depth which society will require.

      Do you think that public school teachers teach everything from memory? If given the will to teach you children, you would likely obtain the materials that you would need to teach them everything that modern society requires and expects.

      However, since religion really hasn't advanced much in the last few centuries, I'm reasonably capable of indoctrinating my children on that subject with only the help of my local parish.

      Let's make the timeframe a little more practical. Has Math, Science, Literature, Art (paint, sculpture, music, dance and song) and Language(s) (both grammar and vocabulary) changed appreciably in your lifetime? (OK, Art changes, but that is to be expected) If not, then you are reasonably capable of indoctrinating your children on these subjects with only the help of your local library/bookstore/educational co-op

    15. Re:Majority rules..... by jafac · · Score: 2

      That's bullshit.

      I live in a VERY religious area of the country, and my kids are homeschooled. Homeschoolers can band together and do form "support networks" and even do some cooperative education. I, for one, do science demos from time to time for grade-school age homeschooled kids in my area. There are religious homeschool groups, and secular homeschool groups.
      We've dealt with both types. The religious ones DO tend to keep to themselves, and DO tend to harbor some views which I would classify as extremist (the evil atheist gummint is out to get us).

      While the religious ones tend to be more helpful and generous and well-meaning, the secular groups tend to be better funded and more organized, and the parents seem to be more "into it".

      You don't have to be a religious freak to be a homeschooler. Nor do you have to be a conspiracy theorist. You just have to care enough about your kids to take matters of their education into your own hands.

      In my kids' case - it turned out that our son just wasn't socially ready for school when he went into kindergarten. But boy was he academically ready. He's way ahead of the other kids his age, especially in math and science. But socially, he's just a very sensitive kid, and we chose to protect him from the schoolyard politics until he gets a bit older. He's also shorter than average height, and just doesn't have the attention span necessary to deal with the pavlovian schedule of RING the bell, sit down, study subject X for 45 minutes, RING the bell, stand up, move on to subject Y.
      Sometimes, he'll be in the mood to do math, and he'll spend a whole week doing nothing but math. Then he'll move on to english, geography or history, or whatever. Sometimes he'll study all of them in a day - but the point is - he does not HAVE to, just to make it easier on the other kids' schedule. There are no other kids, or social distractions, and he sets his own schedule.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    16. Re:Majority rules..... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      The only repect that public schools foster is blind respect for authority.

      As the son of a public school teacher, I find this insulting. I know of many people who go through the public system and emerge upstanding, civic-minded citizens. I know of many teachers and administrators who feel it their duty and privelge to teach open-mindedness, self-reliance, and critical thinking. To equate the public school system with some sort of mindless political factory is a broad overgeneralization which is careless at best and hurtful if intentional.


      Bigotry, provincialism, fanaticism, authoritarianism, selfishness... these are "values" more easily -- and more often -- taught at home than in the schools.

    17. Re:Majority rules..... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      (a) Because the typical parent lacks the time, energy, will, and training to successfully educate his/her child;

      I disagree with all of these with the exception of will.

      Really? The typical person, half of a two-income household working, together, three or four jobs to meet the expense of housing, commuting, food... this parent has the time and energy to plot out and execute a full, enriching, and meaningful curriculum for every one of his/her children? I suppose he/she has access to the latest research on learning patterns, too, and the training to interpret them. It goes without saying, of course, that the typical American parent holds at least college degrees in English literature, art design, music, history (world and American), rhetoric, and math up to and including integral calculus -- to say nothing of biology, chemistry, and physics. It's a good thing that the typical American parent also has, in his/her home, fullly-equipped bio, chem, and physics labs. It's probably not worth mentioning foreign language and culture, since we all know that the typical American is well-versed in one or more non-English cultures.


      The typical American parent might -- might! -- be qualified to educate his/her child through, maybe, the equivalent of third grade. Of course, along the way, any mistakes, misconceptions, blind spots, or outright errors in the parent's education are likely to be replicated in the child, since there is no professional community to help keep the parent on track. Meanwhile, the potential for the child to misinterpret "education" for "pleasing authority" is magnified, since now there is just the one authority to answer to. That makes it so easy to inculcate a respect for pluralism.


      Is it impossible for home schooling to work? No. Is it logically impossible for it to achieve a result superior to in-school education? No. But is it likely that the typical parent could pull off such an at-home education? Not at all. Based entirely anecdotally (and thus, I concede, not worth the phosophorous it's printed on), in my experience, home-schooling has been an unmitigated disaster for the children I have encountered.

    18. Re:Majority rules..... by goldmeer · · Score: 1
      If the will is to homeschool, then it is likely that both parents do not work outside of the home. If that means that the family lives in a smaller domicile, drives older automobiles, foregoes the luxuries of eating out and more costly forms of entertainment, then that may be the way that enables the will. From my experience, the process of providing an education also gives an education. Why would one need to have a college degree in all the topics that you list to instruct a student in any of the topics. Once a student has an understanding of her native language grammar and vocabulary, she can learn about other topics at will with the exception of math based science. Hard science needs to have the basic language of math understood through calculus before Physics is learned. Once Neutonian physics has been learned, all other sciences build on that.

      If you say that the typical American cannot teach these topics, you are saying that the typical American cannot learn these topics either. If you can learn, you can master. If you can master, you can teach. It all comes down to will. If you have the will to teach, you will find the way.

      If a teacher obtains and provides texts that cover topics, does it matter if there are "holes" in the teacher's mastery on topic of the text? If the student has questions regarding the material, is the prent/teacher no less capible of performing the research necessary to complete the mastery of the topic at hand than a certified teacher? Once again, it comes down to will.

      What do you think that the requirements are to "pass" 3rd grade? Addition, Subtraction, single digit multiplication. Forget division. Identifying a noun, and a verb. Forget the rest of grammar. That would "pass" 3rd grade. Are you so sure that the majority of American citizens could not teach their children that much?

      If the parent can learn, the parent can teach.

    19. Re:Majority rules..... by goldmeer · · Score: 1
      I must retract the use of the word "only". I should have used the work "primary" in it's stead.

      I also know of many that survived the public school system and became "upstanding, civic-minded citizens." I'm not certain that I would attribute the success to the school system or in spite of it. Most of the "successes" that come to mind have outside influences such as Boy/Girl Scouts, Boy/Girl Clubs, Church groups, and other such orginazations focused on improving the members. I also know of many (possibly much more) that came out of the public school system totally unprepared to live as a functioning adult. The school system has failed in teaching. These individuals have failed in learning. I cannot make a generalization as to the end results of the process, but I can say that I can imagine a bleak future if the process continues unchecked.

    20. Re:Majority rules..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you go read up on Buddhism, you ignorant fuck?

    21. Re:Majority rules..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try and find "separation of church and state" in the constitution

    22. Re:Majority rules..... by thales · · Score: 2

      " Most people in this country are monotheistic, and since majority rules we have "In God we Trust". If you want to be in a Ahtiest country, go to China."

      IF you beleave this nonsense, then In the Roman Empire the majority of the people were Pagans, so the early Christians were WRONG to attempt to introduce Monotheism into a Pagan nation, and the Romans were justified in persacuting them for refusing to join the majority in offering sacrafices to the Gods of Rome.

      Don't hand me any "majority rules" bullshit if you follow the teachings of men who rebelled against the majority religion of their time. This includes the Old Testiment prophets and Jesus of Nazarath as well as Mohaemed of Mecca.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    23. Re:Majority rules..... by ubernostrum · · Score: 1

      Yes. Majority rules. So in about ten years, if you want to speak English, you should go to England, because the majority of Americans will likely be Hispanics who hablo espanol. You should also convert to Roman Catholicism if you'd like to stay here. Also please change your ethnicity, we don't allow people of your type here, you don't conform to the majority. That's what America is all about...the majority dictates absolutely, and forces everyone to do what they say, even if it's against the will of a few pesky people who think they ought to be free.

    24. Re:Majority rules..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God bless you!!! Oh, I forgot, that might offend someone. See http://www.wallbuilders.com for evidence that this is (was) a Christian nation.

    25. Re:Majority rules..... by festers · · Score: 1

      Public schools are tax-funded conformity factories. Lumping large groups of closely aged children into the same area has produced a culture of peer pressure, materialism and greed. "Helps find common values and respect for values not held in common"? Are you kidding me? That's got to be the biggest line of BS I've read on /. in a long time.

      --


      -------
      "Every artist is a cannibal, every poet is a thief."
  82. Church vs State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Duh how would you like being Athiest or Sikh or something else and having to pledge allegence under this god who you think is total crap because he doesn't exist/and or you don't believe in him.

    Don't force people to say or do things like this when you associate such meaning with them. Only let those who want to participate participate and let the rest be.

    USA Backwards Super Power #1

    1. Re:Church vs State by octalgirl · · Score: 1

      Nobody is forced - saying the pledge is completely option in every school in the United States and has been for many years.

    2. Re:Church vs State by Gathius · · Score: 1

      Um, I don't ever remember having a choice.. And realistically, no child is ever going to say "Teacher, I think I'll refrain from pledging allegeiance today because I don't understand the full philosophical significance of it."

    3. Re:Church vs State by octalgirl · · Score: 1

      It has been that way for some time. In fact there are already many schools who do not say the pledge in the morning. During the first days of schools teachers instruct students on what the time is for - the pledge and moment of silence. They are also told that it is NOT a requirement, but the will be expected to be quiet during this time. They are told they can use the moment of silence to say a quiet prayer if they choose, or just think about the rest of day or the tv show they watched the night before. Although many schools handle this slightly differently, if you are curious, then call your local school and ask their policy.

  83. Yes I have heard of them . . . by jaaron · · Score: 1

    And if you read their biographies and histories you'll note that while they did not all support churches of a particular sort, most all were very "religious" in that they believed in a Supreme Being and most believed that what they were doing was inspired by that being. Few, if any, of the "founding fathers" were athiests.

    --
    Who said Freedom was Fair?
  84. just saw on tv.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This court has been overturned more than any other appeals court... President Bush called the ruling ridiculous.. They wont be removing under god any time soon.

  85. The 9th Circuit by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

    is the most OVERRULED court in the Federal judiciary. Very likely this will once again be overruled IMO. The Supreme Court is much more conservative than the very liberal 9th Circuit.

    --
    There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
  86. Soo..... by Steveftoth · · Score: 1

    now that we've thought of the children can we stop thinking about them already? I think that it's going to be dinnertime soon.

  87. Brainwashing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't believe that so-called freedom loving people submit their kids to this daily brainwashing.

    1. Re:Brainwashing by Skyshadow · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I can't believe that so-called freedom loving people submit their kids to this daily brainwashing.

      Well, in their defense, small children aren't generally able to grasp the deeper concepts that are involved here, so starting them off with a simple "Like America because it's where we live" message is perfectly fine.

      The problem is that so many Americans never seem to rise above this level of sophistication in their thinking about patriotism or what it means to be a US citizen, and they latch onto the symbols rather than the liberties which it represents.

      It's sad, really. Consider it a good reason to spend time working on your kids' intellectual development -- read with them, talk to them, encourage them to understand not just what but why.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  88. agnostics and athiests agree by no_opinion · · Score: 1

    I personally agree with this ruling. I have yet to meet someone who can conclusively prove that there is -- or isn't -- a god. While I was happy to just ignore the "under god" part, I did find it irritating and would happy to see it go. It certainly does make a religious statement that atheists and agnostics may disagree with.

    1. Re:agnostics and athiests agree by eyegor · · Score: 1

      As a kid who had religion rammed down his gullet by clueless but well-meaning parents, I found myself unwilling to say the "under god" part. Call me a rebel, but why don't we just make the "under god part optional"?

      --

      Don't anthropomorphize computers, they don't like it.
    2. Re:agnostics and athiests agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also agree. The mere mention or sight of the word is disturbing to me. It's nothing short of a neanderthol like throw-back to the age of fear and ignorance.

      I can certainly live with driving past the hundreds of churches in our city. To each his own. But it has no place whatsoever in places of education, on money, or in a court of law.

      One down, two to go... Now we need to get it the heck off of our money and out of our courts! ("so help me god")

  89. Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 2, Funny

    This is terrible news. The Constitution gives us freedom of God, not freedom from God. Our country is very much based on religious ideals and principles. This movement can only lead to gutting the very heart of our country out. If people do not like the religious ideals that this country is based on are free to leave, and I would encourage them to do so.

    1. Re:Terrible News by smagruder · · Score: 2

      I just had to respond. You are a moron.

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    2. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      Are you suggesting this country was not formed on religious ideals? What are you basing this on? Have you read the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, or know anything about the founders of this country?

    3. Re:Terrible News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also believe, you are a MORON. you, out of my gene pool troll.

    4. Re:Terrible News by kst · · Score: 1

      > This is terrible news. The Constitution gives us freedom of God, not freedom from God.

      It gives us both. Take a look at the First Amendment:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; ...

      The wording of the establishment clause is perhaps a bit obscure to modern readers. It means that there can be no legally established religion as some other countries have (the Church of England in the UK, the Roman Catholic Church in some other countries, Islam in others). The strictest interpretation is that it forbids an official Church of United States. However, it's been interpreted (correctly, IMHO) to ban government endorsement of religion.

      (BTW, it's true that some states had official churches in the early 19th century. The 14th Amendment has been interpreted to extend the prohibitions in the Bill of Rights to cover the states as well as the Federal government.

      For example, a daily recitation of the Lord's Prayer in public schools, led by the teacher or another school official, would clearly violate the First Amendment's establishment clause -- even if it weren't mandatory. There's nothing preventing individual students from praying if they want to, but it is not the government's place to lead them in prayer.

      It seems equally obvious to me that the "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance violates the First Amendment, as long as recitation of the Pledge is imposed by a state-run school.

      If you want to recite Pledge, including the "under God", nobody is stopping you.

      This is not a Christian nation, even if the majority of the population happens to be Christian.

      If you think that the "under God" doesn't violate the First Amendment, how would you feel if it said "under Allah", or "under Zeus", or "under Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva, and all the others"?

      The Establishment Clause is there to protect religion as much as it is to protect people from having religion imposed on them. If I choose to pray, I'll pray. It is not the government's place to tell me how to pray.

    5. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      The belief in God reflects the belief in free will and self-determination. The rejection of religion and the acceptance that all of reality is based on natural mechanics implies a deterministic view of the world and the denial of free will. Free will and self-determination are at the heart of our political and judicial systems.

      To say that our government cannot endorse an establishment of religion is correct.
      To say that our government cannot endorse the existence of religion is entirely different and will only serve to destroy our government's foundations.

      Also, the general connotation of the word "God" does not imply a specific religious establishment, as "Alah" or "Shiva" do.

    6. Re:Terrible News by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 1

      I didn't bother to respond. I just added him to my "moron" (foe) list with all the other herd animals like him in the thread and was going to move on, but figured I'd mention it in your wake... or something.

      --
      "Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I'm fucked."; ~ Donald J. Trump
    7. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      The belief in God reflects the belief in free will and self-determination. The rejection of religion and the acceptance that all of reality is based on natural mechanics implies a deterministic view of the world and the denial of free will. Free will and self-determination are at the heart of our political and judicial systems.

      What a load of crap! Free will can be described as a phenomenon caused by laws of nature -- at least this theory is less tautological than describing it as an expression of another will.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    8. Re:Terrible News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Are you suggesting this country was not formed on religious ideals?

      Yes.


      As the government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian Religion.

    9. Re:Terrible News by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      the religious ideals this country is based on are that there are no religious ideals this country is based on. If you don't like it, then you don't have to leave.

      --

      -pyrrho

    10. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      Free will can be described as a phenomenon caused by laws of nature

      How can free will possibly be explained by the natural laws? Natural laws are based on causality. If you believe that all of reality is mechanical, then you must believe every act of will is purely based on genetic and environmental factors. There would be nothing free about it--it would all be determined.

      Religion adds an element of mysticism into reality. This permits a free agent within our will that is not directed by mathematical certainties.

    11. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1
      There certainly is a plethora of atheists on the web preaching their belief that the US was founded as an anti-religious country. It is true that the majority of the founders of this country disliked the current establishment of the Christian church and its dogma. They certainly did not want the church meddling in the affairs of the government. This was a revolutionary idea, and they fought hard to establish it.

      However, the founders were far from being atheists. Many of these quotes you will find on various atheist web sites are reflective of the founders attempting to keep the church away from running the government. There are plenty of quotes to show that the founding fathers were religious and did believe in God:

      George Washington:

      "Reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle."

      "It is impossible to rightly govern . . . without God & the Bible."

      "You do well to wish to learn our arts and ways of life, and above all the religion of Jesus Christ."

      John Adams:

      "Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."

      "We have no government armed with power capable of contending with passions unbridled by morality and religion."

      "Religion & virtue are the only foundations, not only of republicanism and of all free government, but of social felicity under all governments and in all the combinations of human society."

      "Statesmen, my dear sir, may plan and speculate for liberty, but it is religion and morality alone, which can establish the principles upon which freedom can securely stand."

      Thomas Jefferson:

      "I have always said, and will always say, that the studious perusal of the sacred volume will make us better citizens."

      "And can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God? That they are not to be violated but with His wrath? Indeed, I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that His justice cannot sleep forever."

      "No power over the freedom of religion . . .[is] delegated to the United States by the Constitution."

      "Of all the systems of morality, ancient or modern, which have come under my observation, none appears to me so pure as that of Jesus."

      "I am a Christian, in the only sense in which he wished any one to be; sincerely attached to his doctrines, in preference to all others; ascribing to himself every human excellence; and believing he never claimed any other."

      James Madison:

      "We have staked the whole future of American civilization, not on the power of government...[but] upon the capacity of each and every one of us to govern ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God."

      "Before any man can be considered as a member of Civil Society, he must be considered as a subject of the Governor of the Universe."

      John Quincy Adams:

      "The greatest glory of the American Revolution was this: It connected in one indissoluble bond, the principles of civil government with the principles of Christianity."

      "No book in the world deserves to be so unceasingly studied, and so profoundly meditated upon as the Bible."

      "Is it not that the Declaration of Independence first organized the social compact on the Foundation of the Redeemer's mission upon earth? That it laid the cornerstone of human government upon the first precepts of Christianity?"



      As far as English Common Law is concerned, Thomas Jefferson was not exactly accurate in that letter he wrote. King Alfred the Great was heavily influenced by Judeo-Christian thought. He borrowed heavily from SS. Augustine, Gregory, and Jerome.



      King Alfred the Great:

      "Alfred's Law Code was no ordinary catalogue of West Saxon customary law. It was a synthesis, carried out under the king's direction, of the legal practice in several Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, introduced by a scholarly preface which already bears all the hallmarks of Alfred's interest in historical issues and in the Christian wisdom of Late Antiquity."



      And finally, the Constitution of each of the 50 States acknowledges and calls upon the Providence of God for the blessings of freedom.
    12. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      the religious ideals this country is based on are that there are no religious ideals this country is based on

      Are you suggesting this country is based on atheism? Are freewill and self-determination not religious ideals? Can an atheist believe in freewill?

    13. Re:Terrible News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they are not. If anything the bible itself supports a fatalistic determinism. 2 Th.2:11-12 "God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned." Rom.8:29-30 "For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate.... Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified." 2 Tim.1:9 "Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began." First off, when talking about science, determinism is only as good as quantum mechanics. It's called the uncertainty principle. Everything is probability. If Einstein liked it or not, god does play dice. I might add Newton was a determanalist and highly religious.

    14. Re:Terrible News by pyrrho · · Score: 2

      It was and remains based on multiculteralism.

      The other reply explains better than I would about religion on the question of free except to say it's clearly on both sides like philosophy.

      Of course an atheist can believe in free will, or not. You do not need a God in order have free will, you are as likely to have it yourself as for there to be a God to give it to you. An atheist will go with the evidence like anyone will, given time.

      A God or god hypothesis really isn't needed to support any of the valid moral or philosophic principles that it traditionally embodies.

      Having said this, don't think I discount or disbelieve your God. And I have seen that people can use religion to find a better life, attitude and world view for themselves, which is more important than any other consideration. Still, I prefer the traditional philosophical approach, which is to justify atheistically any traditional artifice you wich to maintain.

      --

      -pyrrho

    15. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      "Mechanical" is a very narrow idea about laws of nature. For example, in quantum mechanics you can't even get a deterministic answer about the position and speed of an object. More relevant to this, there is nothing in the laws of nature that prevent a system as complex as human to be able to make decisions -- to have a free will it's not necessary to be able to make all possible decisions. For example, the fact that after reading your comment I can not decide to perform a ritualistic suicide does not mean that my free will is not sufficiently free for it.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    16. Re:Terrible News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quotes from the founders of this country-

      "The Government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion."

      -John Adams

      "The Christian church has set up a religion of pomp and revenue in pretended imitation of a person (Jesus) who lived a life of poverty."

      -Thomas Paine

      "Religion and government will both exist in greater purity, the less they are mixed together."

      "During almost fifteen centuries has the legal establishment of Christianity been on trial. What have been its fruits? More or less in all places, pride and indolence in the Clergy, ignorance and servility in the laity, in both, superstition, bigotry and persecution."

      -James Madison

      "Christianity...(has become) the most perverted system that ever shone on man. ...Rogueries, absurdities and untruths were perpetrated upon the teachings of Jesus by a large band of dupes and importers led by Paul, the first great corrupter of the teaching of Jesus."

      -Thomas Jefferson

      How much do you know about the founders of this country?

    17. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      As far as your bible quotes go, there are enough passages that can be pulled out to backup just about any point you want to make. I've always found Bible quotes to be a very weak platform for philosophical arguments, whether you are a Christian or an atheist. The only notable Christian philosopher that was a determinist that I can think of was St. Augustine. There will always be exceptions, but in general, the religious almost always sit in the freewill camp.

      As far as quantum physics are concerned, I really do not think the uncertainty principle will help you. A materialist is obligated to believe in statistical randomness which is not really grounds for freewill. Rolling a dice to decide what decision I am going to make does not constitute what most people would consider freewill.

      With regards to Sir Isaac, I know his works heavily influenced the determinism philosophy, but I remember him questioning determinism as an explanation for human will. Do you have a source that with regards to your assertion that Newton did not believe in freewill?

    18. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      Of course an atheist can believe in free will, or not. You do not need a God in order have free will, you are as likely to have it yourself as for there to be a God to give it to you. An atheist will go with the evidence like anyone will, given time.

      I guess I should have phrased the question "on what grounds can an atheist believe in freewill". I have argued with many atheists that do believe in freewill, but they are unable to provide a scientific explanation for it. Freewill and materialism contradict each other.

      Most people that believe in atheism do not understand its logical consequences.

      BTW: I am generalizing atheists as materialists. This is not always accurate, although I have found it to be true 99% of the time.

    19. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1
      "Mechanical" is a very narrow idea about laws of nature.

      Please explain. Laws of nature are reducible to mathematical relationships of cause and effect, yes? Here is the definition of mechanical that I am using (pulled from Dictionary.com):
      Interpreting and explaining the phenomena of the universe by referring to causally determined material forces; mechanistic.
      For example, in quantum mechanics you can't even get a deterministic answer about the position and speed of an object.

      Heisenburg's Uncertainty doesn't help a materialist explain freewill. Pure randomness cannot lead to freewill. If my decisions are based on dice rolls, how am I exercising freewill? In order for quantum mechanics to account for freewill, there would have to be an uncaused agent realizing the outcome. That agent would be supernatural because it would be outside the scope of mathematical determination.

      As a side note, I personally feel a materialist has an awkward belief system if they believe in pure randomness anyway--it seems to me a materialist is obligated to believe in "hidden-variables" with regards to an interpretation of quantum.

      More relevant to this, there is nothing in the laws of nature that prevent a system as complex as human to be able to make decisions

      The ability to commit to an action does not imply freewill was involved. If my sprinkler system "decides" to turn on at 10am, that does not mean it was not a determined event. If the weather "decides" to rain today, does that mean the weather has freewill?
    20. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      I hope you don't mind if I don't retype this...

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=34925&cid=3776 562

    21. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Please explain. Laws of nature are reducible to mathematical relationships of cause and effect, yes?

      Nature has nothing to do with mathematics -- mathematics is a tool that is used to represent the laws of nature.

      Here is the definition of mechanical that I am using (pulled from Dictionary.com): Interpreting and explaining the phenomena of the universe by referring to causally determined material forces; mechanistic. For example, in quantum mechanics you can't even get a deterministic answer about the position and speed of an object.

      Heisenburg's Uncertainty doesn't help a materialist explain freewill.

      It merely demonstrates that religious people's arguments are based on extremely primitive view of science. Uncertainty definitely demonstrates that even with infinitely correct knowledge it's impossible to predict the outcome of any process, therefore claiming that nature without god is too "deterministic" for their tastes is wrong and pointless.

      Pure randomness cannot lead to freewill. If my decisions are based on dice rolls, how am I exercising freewill?

      This entirely depends on definitions. Whatever your decisions are based on, you are exercising your will as long as the system that makes decision (has will) has self-awareness as you (is actually you). What is the internals is pretty much irrelevant, but the more complex they are, the more complex (and therefore less trivially derived from the inputs) the decisions are (and therefore they are more "free", as dependent more on your own thoughts than on immediate inputs). The degree of "free" is always different -- in some cases there is none (knee jerking), in some cases there is a lot (writing a book).

      In order for quantum mechanics to account for freewill, there would have to be an uncaused agent realizing the outcome.

      Even though quantum mechanics has little to do with free will, in quantum mechanics the whole point of the theory is that outcome is unpredictable without any agent involved.

      That agent would be supernatural because it would be outside the scope of mathematical determination.

      Mathematics has nothing to do with it -- again, as an example, there is shitload of mathematical formulas describing various things in quantum mechanics even though quantum mechanics itself deals with probabilities and not actual events.

      There is a theorethical possibility to duplicate human's action by collecting all information about the situation around the human and state of all cells in human body, making a precise calculations of every process involved, and getting precisely the same result from a mathematical model of a human as from a real human. This however does nothing to negate free will because the complexity of system that duplicates a human will be higher than a human itself, and we can only conclude that it also has a free will identical to the human. The only thing that all this may contradict with, is religious view of human free will, as opposed to scientific one, and your emotional attachment to the former, as opposed to the second.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    22. Re:Terrible News by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      >I guess I should have phrased the question "on what grounds can an atheist believe in freewill". I have argued with many atheists that do believe in freewill, but they are unable to provide a scientific explanation for it. Freewill and materialism contradict each other.

      I do not know of any physical explanation for "free will", in fact, most definitions tend toward the circular, perhaps you have a consice one to offer?

      Still, I think there is much of promise to explain the phenomenon called "free will". The essential question is "Is the sensation of free will an illusion?". That is, one has to at least consider the possibility that we are determined phenomenon, like water running down hill and the notion of free will is a sensation that we are controlling something that we are really just experiencing.

      But modern physics provides larger opportunities for free will. Specifically the Hiesenberg Uncertainty Principle argues for "randomism". I propose that random and "chosen" is just a matter of point of view anyway, and indistinguishable.

      Also Quantum Theory has certain confusing aspects, that really look as though all possible chains of event occur simultaneously... in this model, "free will" is the phenomenon of tracing out a particular path among the network of possible events.

      Do you have a religious explanation/justification of a belief in free will?

      Most people that believe in atheism do not understand its logical consequences.

      BTW: I am generalizing atheists as materialists. This is not always accurate, although I have found it to be true 99% of the time.

      --

      -pyrrho

    23. Re:Terrible News by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      the text:

      Most people that believe in atheism do not understand its logical consequences.

      BTW: I am generalizing atheists as materialists. This is not always accurate, although I have found it to be true 99% of the time.


      should have been quoted.

      --

      -pyrrho

    24. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      Nature has nothing to do with mathematics -- mathematics is a tool that is used to represent the laws of nature.

      I don't understand your point. It seems to me you just contradicted yourself. You are correct in stating that mathematics is used to describe nature (from counting sheep to predicting comet trajectories), but I do not follow the purpose or meaning of the statement "Nature has nothing to do with mathematics". If there is no relationship between the two, how can mathematics be a tool in understanding nature?

      It merely demonstrates that religious people's arguments are based on extremely primitive view of science.

      Is modern science's view of nature primitive? People of the year 3100 might think so. Your statement is irrelevant. Religion is used to describe the metaphysical; that which is outside the scope of material observation.

      Uncertainty definitely demonstrates that even with infinitely correct knowledge it's impossible to predict the outcome of any process, therefore claiming that nature without god is too "deterministic" for their tastes is wrong and pointless.

      First of all, your statement assumes a specific interpretation of quantum. The empirical realm of quantum science is simply data. It is the interpretation of that data that carries us over into philosophy. You need to explain to me an interpretation of "uncertainty" that does not either:

      A. Involve phenomenon that cannot be described with mathematics (i.e. supernatural)
      B. Involve phenomenon that is purely random
      C. Involve determinism that is unknown to us because of "hidden variables"

      I would categorize those that interpret uncertainty under category (A) to be religious in a spiritual or mystic sense. I would classify those that interpret uncertainty under category (B) or (C) as materialists who are also, generally, atheists. Do you disagree? Is there any other possible interpretation that does not follow one of these categories?

      Even though quantum mechanics has little to do with free will, in quantum mechanics the whole point of the theory is that outcome is unpredictable without any agent involved.

      Once again you are moving away from empirical data and into what your personal philosophical beliefs are. What experiment has shown there is not any agent involved?

      Mathematics has nothing to do with it -- again, as an example, there is shitload of mathematical formulas describing various things in quantum mechanics even though quantum mechanics itself deals with probabilities and not actual events.

      Hmm...I'm not sure what to make of this. If quantum mechanics does not have anything to do with actual events, how do we conduct experiments that deal with quantum mechanics?

      There is a theorethical possibility to duplicate human's action by ...

      Let's not get into a semantic argument on the definition of freewill. You have just pinpointed the philosophical difference between the "religious" view of freewill and the "materialist" view of freewill.

      The only thing that all this may contradict with, is religious view of human free will, as opposed to scientific one, and your emotional attachment to the former, as opposed to the second.

      I would not classify the second one as "scientific" as, once again, science only gives us empirical data. I would prefer to refer to it as the "materialist" view. You have taken the typical position that atheists assume the intellectual high ground because you believe science agrees with their position. This is simply not the case. It is not scientifically evident that supernaturalism and mysticism do not exist. Atheists have a belief system, just like everyone else.

      Which view of freewill do you believe the founders of this country had? Do you think it influenced their ideology in forming the foundations of our country?

      The materialist's view of freewill is destructive to our way of life. How can we have more freewill than the weather does? Do we ever put the weather on trial for its behavior?

      The secular movement in this country is moving us away from judgment and towards rehabilitation. It is undermining the moral fiber from which this country was made great and destroying the sense of duty and accountability.

    25. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      I do not know of any physical explanation for "free will", in fact, most definitions tend toward the circular, perhaps you have a consice one to offer?

      It is my contention that a natural explanation is not possible. That is, natural in the sense that it can be expressed with mathematics. If freewill could be modeled mathematically, it wouldn't exactly be free.

      The essential question is "Is the sensation of free will an illusion?"

      You are absolutely correct. That is the essential question. I believe there are two positions on this: the materialist position (it is an illusion), and the mystic position (it is truly free).

      I propose that random and "chosen" is just a matter of point of view anyway, and indistinguishable.

      I'm not so sure. If I walk into McDonalds and have to roll a dice to determine what to order (1= #1 meal, 2= #2 meal, 3= #3 meal, etc.), that is not exactly the same thing as walking into McDonalds and choosing a meal out of free volition. It is my contention that randomness cannot explain freewill in the sense that most people consider freewill.

      Do you have a religious explanation/justification of a belief in free will?

      As far as quantum is concerned, I prefer the Copenhagen interpretation. This interpretation certainly has some serious religious implications.

      In general, I feel that our will is dependent on a supernatural agent. By supernatural, I mean that it is not bound to mathematical representation and description. However, at the same time we are driven by material desires and needs. In a sense, we are both captain and slave to our own ship (to borrow a phrase from someone else).

    26. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      I don't understand your point. It seems to me you just contradicted yourself. You are correct in stating that mathematics is used to describe nature (from counting sheep to predicting comet trajectories), but I do not follow the purpose or meaning of the statement "Nature has nothing to do with mathematics". If there is no relationship between the two, how can mathematics be a tool in understanding nature?

      Mathematics is a tool used by humans -- just like a language is not "contained" in things that it describes, mathematics is not "contained" in nature, it merely provides a tool useful for understanding of nature by humans. And, as opposed to science, mathematics does not deal with actual objects or processes, but concepts that may (or may not) be useful for science when it describes those objects or processes. Say, in the Second Newton's law "F=m*a" is a mathematical formula that describes a law of nature (as known by humans, and limited in its precisions by more general laws). However there is nothing in nature that actually determines values of mass and acceleration and performs multiplication of mass and acceleration to produce the value of force, the operation only exist in human mind to describe one of the aspects of interaction between objects -- application of force.

      Is modern science's view of nature primitive? People of the year 3100 might think so. Your statement is irrelevant. Religion is used to describe the metaphysical; that which is outside the scope of material observation.

      I merely claim that your view of science is outdated already.

      First of all, your statement assumes a specific interpretation of quantum. The empirical realm of quantum science is simply data. It is the interpretation of that data that carries us over into philosophy. You need to explain to me an interpretation of "uncertainty" that does not either:
      A. Involve phenomenon that cannot be described with mathematics (i.e. supernatural)
      B. Involve phenomenon that is purely random
      C. Involve determinism that is unknown to us because of "hidden variables"
      I would categorize those that interpret uncertainty under category (A) to be religious in a spiritual or mystic sense. I would classify those that interpret uncertainty under category (B) or (C) as materialists who are also, generally, atheists. Do you disagree? Is there any other possible interpretation that does not follow one of these categories?

      You certainly don't understand what quantum mechanics is talking about. Not only things are random, but the theory was created by dealing with a problem that came down to the following: not only "hidden variables", "pure randomness" or even "divine intervention" can't describe things, but mere possibility of any observer (even if the observer is god himself), being able to collect knowledge and predict exact parameters for a particle (position and speed, energy and time, location after passing through something) means that process will not happen as it is observed. For science that is based on the idea that everything that exist, can be observed somehow, it means that those things actually don't exist, and we can merely have choice which of things see as more or less precise. When something can be known precisely (say, particles passed through two small holes at some short distance from each other, and we have registered some particle at some point behind them, so we know, or at lease we _can_ know it at some precision), something else about particles should be known less precisely (in some cases we CAN'T find out, which hole the particle passed, and, reversing that, the resulted position is unpredictable for any particular particle that we have sent through the holes no matter how much we originally know about it, particles produce a diffraction pattern as if they were waves -- with no possibility to determine, which particle passed through which hole).

      Once again you are moving away from empirical data and into what your personal philosophical beliefs are. What experiment has shown there is not any agent involved?

      Experiments show the results that match with a theory made with an assumption that prediction is impossible (experiment with particles and holes produces diffraction -- even if particles can't interact, one can send a single electron per second, and after all electrons are collected on a photograph, it will still show a pattern!), and not the results made with any "deterministic" assumption, so scientists have to accept a theory even though it does not allow to predict a trajectory of individual particle but denies an existence of such a thing! The process will be still described in terms and mathematical formulas, but those will now describe probabilities and uncertainties, not precise values of everything, as a person familiar with classical mechanics would expect. Of course, there is always another explanation -- instead of all that, someone/something supernatural actually messes with each particle to produce an effect that matches the theory, but considering the number of particles in the universe, this gives the word "micromanagement" the whole new meaning.

      Hmm...I'm not sure what to make of this. If quantum mechanics does not have anything to do with actual events, how do we conduct experiments that deal with quantum mechanics?

      We can observe whatever we can, and compare whatever can be predicted -- if some theory predicts that half-life of certain atom is a certain amount of time we can take a lot of atoms and check if after that amount of time approximately half of atoms left. When each particular atom changes into something else remains just as unpredictable as without a theory, but we know that atoms change into something else, we know that the process is random, and we may know how fast it should go taken over a large amount of atoms. Good enough -- knowledge that something can't be predicted is still a knowledge.

      I would not classify the second one as "scientific" as, once again, science only gives us empirical data. I would prefer to refer to it as the "materialist" view. You have taken the typical position that atheists assume the intellectual high ground because you believe science agrees with their position. This is simply not the case. It is not scientifically evident that supernaturalism and mysticism do not exist. Atheists have a belief system, just like everyone else.

      It's impossible to scientifically prove nonexistence of anything -- one can claim that a tooth fairy exists, and there will be no scientific proof of her nonexistence. But this is why it's an accepted scientific practice to treat all theories that have nothing to support themselves but lack of ptoof of nonexstence, as a complete and utter bullshit. On the other hand, if theory offers an explanation for something, that other theories either don't, or give more complex one (any explanation that involves god is as complex as god himself, so religion usually comes really far from "simple"), the theory is accepted. This does not guarantee that all theories are "the truth", but so far most of what is produced looks like a very good approximation of "the truth", approaching it closer over the time -- this process worked quite well while the religion for all its history just kept their "default explanation" through god's actions, and then weaseled out, accepting scientific explanations when there was no alternatives left. Not once in millennia of their history all religions in the world actually produced a single valid explanation for some natural phenomenon that could be used in any human activity, however examples of religion taking a side of some absolutely idiotic theory, and declaring people "immoral" for questioning it, are quite abundant. Granted, it's not a proof that the opposite can't happen, but it's still a very good reason to not expect religion to explain nature in the future.

      Which view of freewill do you believe the founders of this country had? Do you think it influenced their ideology in forming the foundations of our country?

      The founders of this country weren't philosophers concerned with this question, and certainly this was the last thing on their agenda. And even if they were, it would be quite irrelevant -- personal belief that politicians have is not something that everyone in the country should follow, especially if those politicians specifically put it into the laws that government should not mandate religious beliefs.

      The materialist's view of freewill is destructive to our way of life.

      Oh, puh-leeze, no political slogans in the middle of something that tries to resemble a serious discussion.

      How can we have more freewill than the weather does? Do we ever put the weather on trial for its behavior?

      Weather has no self-awareness, so it neither can have free will, nor will be able to understand that it actually is on trial if someone will be foolish enough to bring it there. There were cases when people tried to sue god for bad weather -- only to discover that apparently defendant ignores the whole thing.

      The secular movement in this country is moving us away from judgment and towards rehabilitation. It is undermining the moral fiber from which this country was made great and destroying the sense of duty and accountability.

      More claims of nonexistent things and political posturing. Religious people believe that only religion (and only their religion) can be the source of ethical norms morals. Non-religious people believe that same ethical norms and morals are a part of tradition that all societies -- religious or secular, are based on. Neither claim that those things are unimportant, all people judge their actions by ethical scale, however non-religious people have no choice but to judge themselves and others by their deeds, while religious people allow themselves to "negate" their immoral actions by demonstrations of support to god and religion -- having religious thoughts, praying, indoctrinating other people with religion, supporting religious institutions, etc. Therefore, given all other things equal, non-religious people feel more obligation to follow their ethical norms than religious people, they have no morally acceptable alternative while religion offers it. People that ignore moral principles, of course, can ignore them regardless of religious belief, non-religious people will merely ignore them, relgious ones will ignore them with a hope to "compensate" it by praying and feeling sorry eventually, the result is the same (ex: child sexual abuse by Catholic priests, people that certainly knew a lot about religion).

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    27. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      Mathematics is a tool used by humans -- just like a language is not "contained" in things that it describes, mathematics is not "contained" in nature, it merely provides a tool useful for understanding of nature by humans

      I agree. Mathematics is a language used to describe nature. However, this begs the question, how is it that mathematics can consistently describe nature? This goes back to my original point that nature is mechanical. Because it is mechanical, we can use math to describe it. I find it ironic that you used quantum mechanics as an illustration of the narrowness of my notion that nature is "mechanical".

      You certainly don't understand what quantum mechanics is talking about. Not only things are random, but the theory was created by dealing with a problem that came down to the following: not only "hidden variables", "pure randomness" or even "divine intervention" can't describe things, but mere possibility of any observer (even if the observer is god himself), being able to collect knowledge and predict exact parameters for a particle (position and speed, energy and time, location after passing through something) means that process will not happen as it is observed.

      Once again you are talking about a specific interpretation of quantum. You are apparently not even aware of any hidden variable interpretations. The most well known is David Bohm's pilot wave interpretation (also known as Bohmian Mechanics).

      http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-bohm/

      Many theoretical physicists do not take the interpretation seriously, but it is a well-known theory. Ironically, John Bell (of Bells Theorem) was actually an enthusiastic supporter.

      For science that is based on the idea that everything that exist, can be observed somehow, it means that those things actually don't exist, and we can merely have choice which of things see as more or less precise.

      The rest of your message seems geared around the Copenhagen interpretation, although that is not even the most commonly accepted interpretation among theoretical physicists and cosmologists (the most commonly accepted interpretation among this group is the "many worlds" interpretation).

      (experiment with particles and holes produces diffraction -- even if particles can't interact, one can send a single electron per second, and after all electrons are collected on a photograph, it will still show a pattern!),

      I am well aware of the double-slit experiment. You do not need to waste time describing well known quantum experiments.

      Of course, there is always another explanation -- instead of all that, someone/something supernatural actually messes with each particle to produce an effect that matches the theory, but considering the number of particles in the universe, this gives the word "micromanagement" the whole new meaning.

      I am curious of how you can not be religious and still believe in the Copenhagen interpretation? The implication is that there is something about our consciousness as an observer that affects the outcome of a quantum event. It seems to imply that consciousness is not derived from matter and energy, but rather matter and energy is derived from consciousness. In this sense, the material world is born of, or derived from the mind (or spiritual world).

      But this is why it's an accepted scientific practice to treat all theories that have nothing to support themselves but lack of ptoof of nonexstence, as a complete and utter bullshit.... Not once in millennia of their history all religions in the world actually produced a single valid explanation for some natural phenomenon

      If you expect religion to provide you with scientific knowledge, it is no wonder you are not religious. There is a difference between knowledge and wisdom. Religion is a study in wisdom, just as biology is a study in knowledge. The notion that science and religion are incompatible is bogus. Asking for material proof of something immaterial is asking for the impossible.

      The founders of this country weren't philosophers concerned with this question, and certainly this was the last thing on their agenda. And even if they were, it would be quite irrelevant -- personal belief that politicians have is not something that everyone in the country should follow, especially if those politicians specifically put it into the laws that government should not mandate religious beliefs.

      I could overwhelm you with religious quotes from the founders if you like. Their religious notions of freewill were very much part of their ideal for this country.

      "Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." - John Adams

      "And can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God?" - Thomas Jefferson

      "The greatest glory of the American Revolution was this: It connected in one indissoluble bond, the principles of civil government with the principles of Christianity." - John Q. Adams

      Weather has no self-awareness, so it neither can have free will

      First of all, I believe that self-awareness (which is different from self-reference) is not possible in a completely mechanical system. This is not provable, however, so I will leave it at that.

      Secondly, what difference does it make if something is self-aware if it is always caused by external events? In the materialist view of the Universe, everything is part of a massive chain of cause and effect. Everything bad would be the fault of natural laws, not an individual entity. Let us use a computer program analogy. If the laws of nature could be captured in a computable algorithm, there would be no piece of that algorithm that is specific to an individual. All laws of physics are invoked universally across all matter (data).

      Non-religious people believe that same ethical norms and morals are a part of tradition that all societies -- religious or secular, are based on.

      Just out of curiosity, which secular societies are you basing this on? (Hopefully not Stalin's Soviet Union)

      non-religious people have no choice but to judge themselves and others by their deeds

      Are you suggesting that religious people don't judge themselves and others by their deeds? Why would an atheist be compelled to judge someone more so than a theist? I would assert that the opposite is true. Atheists tend to believe in relative morality, while religious people believe in absolute morality. Atheists believe that people are victims to their personal circumstance or condition. For example, the popular secular thought now days is that criminals are either genetically less fortunate, or were not given the beneficial environment that successful people have had, and should therefore, not be judged for their actions.

      Therefore, given all other things equal, non-religious people feel more obligation to follow their ethical norms than religious people, they have no morally acceptable alternative while religion offers it

      What a bogus argument. First of all, most religious people do not think they have a free ticket to perform whatever immoral acts they want. Secondly, even if they did, how would it make them less moral than an atheist? You are suggesting that there is no eternal incentive for religious people to act morally--they can always just ask for forgiveness later. So what is the atheist's eternal incentive to act morally? There isn't one either. In otherwords, they would both have an "either or...it doesn't matter" proposition.

      (ex: child sexual abuse by Catholic priests, people that certainly knew a lot about religion).

      I would suggest that you decouple religious ideals and religious establishments. This is precisely what the founders of our country did. They showed considerable hostility for the current institutions of religion, but cherished the ideals and virtue of religion itself. If my daughter goes to a crappy school, it does not mean that education is not valuable as an idea.

    28. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      I agree. Mathematics is a language used to describe nature. However, this begs the question, how is it that mathematics can consistently describe nature?

      Any sufficiently developed language has this property.

      This goes back to my original point that nature is mechanical. Because it is mechanical, we can use math to describe it. I find it ironic that you used quantum mechanics as an illustration of the narrowness of my notion that nature is "mechanical".

      This is pointless -- you are arguing about terminology, and not just any terminology but one that you are defining by yourself to suit your argument.

      Once again you are talking about a specific interpretation of quantum. You are apparently not even aware of any hidden variable interpretations. The most well known is David Bohm's pilot wave interpretation (also known as Bohmian Mechanics). http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-bohm/ Many theoretical physicists do not take the interpretation seriously, but it is a well-known theory. Ironically, John Bell (of Bells Theorem) was actually an enthusiastic supporter.

      Occam's razor. There is an infinite number of possible theories that describe same things as quantum mechanics does, but only one has minimal amount of assumptions -- what happens to be quantum mechanics. So unless there is something that contradicts quantum mechanics and complies with "alternative" theory, there is no point in even considering it.

      The rest of your message seems geared around the Copenhagen interpretation, although that is not even the most commonly accepted interpretation among theoretical physicists and cosmologists (the most commonly accepted interpretation among this group is the "many worlds" interpretation).

      Completely unrelated things.

      am well aware of the double-slit experiment. You do not need to waste time describing well known quantum experiments.

      I am explaining a theory using experiment as an example. You seem to be under some delusion that all explanations are created equal, so you simply give whatever is convenient for you. This does not change the fact that almost all possible explanations are complete bullshit, and the goal of science is to find one that isn't, not to produce more bullshit and claim that it might be true.

      I am curious of how you can not be religious and still believe in the Copenhagen interpretation? The implication is that there is something about our consciousness as an observer that affects the outcome of a quantum event. It seems to imply that consciousness is not derived from matter and energy, but rather matter and energy is derived from consciousness. In this sense, the material world is born of, or derived from the mind (or spiritual world).

      Observer does not have to have consciousness, and does not have to be present -- theory deals with possibility of observation of things that do or don't exist. Of course, religious person will see god everywhere, but this is not my problem.

      If you expect religion to provide you with scientific knowledge, it is no wonder you are not religious. There is a difference between knowledge and wisdom. Religion is a study in wisdom, just as biology is a study in knowledge. The notion that science and religion are incompatible is bogus. Asking for material proof of something immaterial is asking for the impossible.

      This is a lot of emotionally-charged words with no content except a claim that religious people have some kind of wisdom that no one else can see. As good as any other bullshit.

      I could overwhelm you with religious quotes from the founders if you like. Their religious notions of freewill were very much part of their ideal for this country.

      I have already explained why it's completely irrelevant, however Jefferson's quote can be at most seen as a metaphor considering how much effort Jefferson himself had spent to keep rekigion out of politics. Again, those people were not philosophers, weren't qualified to place those ideas into laws, and didn't even feel that they can do such a thing, so it's even more foolish to see them as authorities on the subject now.

      First of all, I believe that self-awareness (which is different from self-reference) is not possible in a completely mechanical system. This is not provable, however, so I will leave it at that.

      By commonly accepted definitons everything that moves is described by mechanics, however you use "mechanical" for some kind of description of determinism that even modern science sees as primitive simplification. Your definitions of "mechanical" and "not mechanical" seem to exist just to distinguish between things that you believe, can be described by science and things that you believe, can't be described by science, so you have made a circular argument that means nothing.

      Secondly, what difference does it make if something is self-aware if it is always caused by external events?

      Because it may be more complex or less complex, keep more state, less state or none. Self-awareness requires complex organization that most of things don't have, and humans do, and humans' behavior is drastiically different when they deal with self-aware persons and non-self-aware objects. Certainly the procedure of trial that you have mentioned is applicable only to a self-aware person.

      In the materialist view of the Universe, everything is part of a massive chain of cause and effect.

      This is irrelevant, the fact that human collects various kinds of state (memory, thoughts, traits of character) derived as a higher degree of "structuredness" than raw imputs makes him a unique individual that is impossible to trivially duplicate, or purposefully manipulate. If humans were possible to purposefully manipulate into thinking any pre-defined thoughts and to perform any pre-defined actions, I would worry about the value of self-awareness and individuality, however this is not the case -- a way that a human thinks is protected by the nature of his brain in the same manner as encrypted data is protected by hard to reverse nature of the encryption algorithm.

      Everything bad would be the fault of natural laws, not an individual entity.

      It does not matter what influenced the formation of individual entity -- if entity is self-aware, it should be responsible. Kinda sucks for people that were brought to be assholes, but works just fine considering that humans have a lot of capacity and context for self-improvement.

      Let us use a computer program analogy. If the laws of nature could be captured in a computable algorithm, there would be no piece of that algorithm that is specific to an individual. All laws of physics are invoked universally across all matter (data).

      The possibility of duplication does not negate anything -- universe is not self-aware, yet it contains self-aware people, same may apply to a computer that simulates a piece of the universe.

      Just out of curiosity, which secular societies are you basing this on? (Hopefully not Stalin's Soviet Union).

      I read it as "Just out of a desperate attempt of ad-hominen attack based on ideology...", however I really don't care. I have lived in a post-Stalin Soviet Union, and it was a good example of a society where religion was neither co-operating with a government's ideology, nor was an important part of people's lives. Contrary to some propaganda chicles, people were not dragged out of churches by NKVD agents, and did not behave any less ethical than anywhere else in the world -- for most of them religion was something to ridicule, ideology was some annoying and remote politicians' game, while ethical norms were relevant and therefore present in the everyday life. Of course, your propaganda most likely made you think that after 50's Russia magically jumped into mid-80's with no social progress in between, however if that was the case, a lot of stuff wouldn't happen. From observing that society I have found that people have no internal need to have a religion, and when removed (voluntarily or not) from religion-laced environment they can perfectly continue living without clinging to religion, turning into monsters or adopting something immoral as the source of guidance. Again, I don't think, you can believe this, local propaganda engraved into people's minds horrible but fictional images of forced labor everywhere, continuous ideological indoctrination, priests being executed by millions per year (wouldn't be any people left soon), corruption worse than in US Senate, and quite possibly bears walking into building and eating people, but for me it only means that propaganda in US was more successful than in USSR -- probably because religion makes people more gullible.

      At this point, outside various political-religious alliances (ironically, those are usually deeply corrupt organizations) people in former USSR still don't care much for religion, and still they don't lose ethhical norms, even though political stuff bothers them much more now.

      Are you suggesting that religious people don't judge themselves and others by their deeds?

      Absolutely! If the outcome of their actions may be excused by devotion to religion, religion trumps deeds, and not the other way around -- a person that does not believe in religion, or disrespects it is considered to be less moral than a believer no matter what, good samaritans nonwithstanding.

      Why would an atheist be compelled to judge someone more so than a theist?

      Not judge more, just use the criteria that does not allow excuses.

      would assert that the opposite is true. Atheists tend to believe in relative morality, while religious people believe in absolute morality.

      This is simply not true. Atheists don't believe in absolutely predefined _actions_ (***NEVER*** kill anyone, ***ALWAYS*** give youe money to the poor, etc.) that define moral behavior for religious people, and they do not all share exactly the same principles, however their ethical principles are just as strong. This allows for less hypocrisy -- a person is responsible for applying moral principles to the situation, not for performing actions that the religion dictates, or looking for excuses when those actions cause harm (say, at war, dealing with unusually distorted society and in other situations when direct following religiously mandated behavior is detrimental to others). This is not moral relativism, it's usually more active and responsible behavior.

      Atheists believe that people are victims to their personal circumstance or condition. For example, the popular secular thought now days is that criminals are either genetically less fortunate, or were not given the beneficial environment that successful people have had, and should therefore, not be judged for their actions.

      I have no idea where have you found such a thing -- I have never heard anyone proposing to ignore crimes. Responsibility is usually valued very high by people who don't expect a supernatural being to be responsible for them. What you have may heard was that people who commit crimes should be not merely punished but somehow encouraged to imprve themselves if it's possible, however I have heard this point of view from people with all kins of religious beliefs, too.

      What a bogus argument. First of all, most religious people do not think they have a free ticket to perform whatever immoral acts they want. Secondly, even if they did, how would it make them less moral than an atheist? You are suggesting that there is no eternal incentive for religious people to act morally--they can always just ask for forgiveness later.

      Or sometimes to have forgiveness already given -- history is full of examples when large number of people commited unspeakable atrocities after being blessed by religious leaders, and of horrible political figures getting forgiveness from priests literally in last minutes of their lives.

      So what is the atheist's eternal incentive to act morally? There isn't one either.

      The only incentive is person's own judgment -- and for an atheist there is no possibility to amend it becsuse there is no god behind his back that can forgive the sins if the person prayed hard enough.

      In otherwords, they would both have an "either or...it doesn't matter" proposition.

      Huh?

      I would suggest that you decouple religious ideals and religious establishments.

      I use this as a merely an example of religious people. While those priests hardly can be described as moral from any imaginable point of view, they certainly believe in god, and that belief didn't make them any better.

      This is precisely what the founders of our country did. They showed considerable hostility for the current institutions of religion, but cherished the ideals and virtue of religion itself. If my daughter goes to a crappy school, it does not mean that education is not valuable as an idea.

      They were concerned with political institutions, and cared about religious ones only regarding their political power. The ides that they based their woork on were not specific to religion, and those people didn't even share a common religion at the time. The whole thing is completely irrelevant by now -- they could've believed in a tooth fairy being a cousin of Zeus, and they would do more or less the same thing because they had enough common sense to follow the ideas common to people regardless of their beliefs.

      I don't even understand all this fascination with details of life of founders of this country -- what they wanted to keep for future generations they already wrote into laws and done in their actions, other than that they were merely humans, fallible, with their private lives, thoughts and actions. They shouldn't be worshipped like idols or be mindlessly imitated, it's insulting to them and to modern people alike.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    29. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      There is an infinite number of possible theories that describe same things as quantum mechanics does, but only one has minimal amount of assumptions -- what happens to be quantum mechanics. So unless there is something that contradicts quantum mechanics and complies with "alternative" theory, there is no point in even considering it.

      You should really become more informed on quantum theory. You are confusing the evidence (quantum mechanics) with the interpretation (copenhagen, many-worlds, pilot wave, etc.). Physical evidence is meaningless from a philosophical perspective unless you interpret it. You seem completely unaware of different interpretations of quantum mechanics and their significance.

      Observer does not have to have consciousness, and does not have to be present -- theory deals with possibility of observation of things that do or don't exist.

      You understand that in quantum theory, the observation influences the outcome of the experiment, right?

      This is a lot of emotionally-charged words with no content except a claim that religious people have some kind of wisdom that no one else can see.

      I am going to lose interest in this debate quickly if this is the best feedback you can give me.

      Again, those people were not philosophers, weren't qualified to place those ideas into laws

      Are you suggesting that politics and philosophy are unrelated? That ideas do not influence political motivations? This is an absurd stance you are taking. It lacks common sense.

      By commonly accepted definitons everything that moves is described by mechanics

      If this is a commonly accepted definition, you should be able to provide me with a reference. The motion of material bodies is just part of it. It is really concerned with the forces and interactions between those bodies.

      Your definitions of "mechanical" and "not mechanical" seem to exist just to distinguish between things that you believe, can be described by science and things that you believe, can't be described by science, so you have made a circular argument that means nothing.

      What am I trying to prove that would be a circular argument? You are correct in stating by belief that there exists some aspect of reality that is not mechanical and cannot be explained by science. If you recall, I stated my beliefs could not be proven, so I would not try. Please try to keep up.

      Self-awareness requires complex organization that most of things don't have

      In a materialist view, self-awareness is simply experiencing particles bouncing around in your head. However, the dynamics of those particles would be controlled by laws of physics. How can someone be held accountable for the laws of physics?

      I have lived in a post-Stalin Soviet Union, and it was a good example of a society where religion was neither co-operating with a government's ideology, nor was an important part of people's lives.

      Where do you live now? If you live in the US, why not go back to the former USSR? Wouldn't you prefer a secular society to a religious one?

      for me it only means that propaganda in US was more successful than in USSR

      Oh right. It is all propaganda. The Soviet Union was really a paradise. Like I said, if it is not that bad over there, why not return?

      If the outcome of their actions may be excused by devotion to religion, religion trumps deeds, and not the other way around -- a person that does not believe in religion, or disrespects it is considered to be less moral than a believer no matter what, good samaritans nonwithstanding.

      This is a ridiculous perception of religion. You seem to think that if a person is religious, they have lost all interest in a moral, prosperous society.

      The only incentive is person's own judgment -- and for an atheist there is no possibility to amend it becsuse there is no god behind his back that can forgive the sins if the person prayed hard enough.

      You seem to have missed my point. You are claiming that a religious person can act immoral without worrying about an eternal consequence--either way they are going to heaven. How is this different from an atheist? They can act immoral without worrying about an eternal consequence--either way they are maggot food. Your argument is illogical. According to your premise, neither the theist nor the atheist has a reason to act moral or immoral--the eternal consequence is the same either way.

      I don't even understand all this fascination with details of life of founders of this country

      No, I wouldn't expect that you do. You do not seem to have any appreciation for the revolutionary ideas they had, and for the virtuous country they created.

    30. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      You should really become more informed on quantum theory. You are confusing the evidence (quantum mechanics) with the interpretation (copenhagen, many-worlds, pilot wave, etc.). Physical evidence is meaningless from a philosophical perspective unless you interpret it. You seem completely unaware of different interpretations of quantum mechanics and their significance.

      I am talking about the application of Occam's razor to theory and evidenvce, not merely the possibility to explain the evidence.

      You understand that in quantum theory, the observation influences the outcome of the experiment, right?

      The influence on the outcome is used merely a concept in a thought experiment -- its significance is in causing the impossibility to observe something, not in actual influence on the experiment, that is without an attempt to observe is nonexistent.

      am going to lose interest in this debate quickly if this is the best feedback you can give me.

      I already have very little interest in this debate as long as it is littered with your emotional outbursts.

      Are you suggesting that politics and philosophy are unrelated? That ideas do not influence political motivations?

      I claim that politicians are not necessarily good philosophers, and that politicians' desisions do not automatically validate all philosophical doctrines and beliefs that those politicians supported.

      This is an absurd stance you are taking. It lacks common sense.

      Only if "common sense" is to consider philosophy and politics to be one and the same.

      If this is a commonly accepted definition, you should be able to provide me with a reference. The motion of material bodies is just part of it. It is really concerned with the forces and interactions between those bodies.

      Interactions between bodies are not specific to mechanics, and force is a concept that is defined in mechanics. Of course, it still has nothing to do with this argument.

      What am I trying to prove that would be a circular argument? You are correct in stating by belief that there exists some aspect of reality that is not mechanical and cannot be explained by science. If you recall, I stated my beliefs could not be proven, so I would not try. Please try to keep up.

      You have made your own definition of "mechanical" based on your belief, and then used it to "prove" this belief. This is why your argument is circular -- your definitions already contain your desired outcome.

      In a materialist view, self-awareness is simply experiencing particles bouncing around in your head. However, the dynamics of those particles would be controlled by laws of physics. How can someone be held accountable for the laws of physics?

      The self-awareness is a property of the structure that those particles reflect -- the nature of the particles is irrelevant, just like "text" may be the property of the arrangement of ink on paper, that has nothing to do with actual ink or paper.

      Where do you live now? If you live in the US, why not go back to the former USSR? Wouldn't you prefer a secular society to a religious one?

      I do not choose my location to express the approval or disapproval of various beliefs and tradition of societies and policies of governments.

      Oh right. It is all propaganda.

      Of course, it was. What do you think, was the whole Cold War about?

      The Soviet Union was really a paradise.

      It sucked approximately as much as US at the time.

      Like I said, if it is not that bad over there, why not return?

      Because it sucks more now, and because I am a programmer, so I have nothing to do in a country with infrastructure destroyed by misguided "free market" proponents.

      This is a ridiculous perception of religion. You seem to think that if a person is religious, they have lost all interest in a moral, prosperous society.

      No, I just think, a religious person has religion placed above any other possible source of ethical norms or morals. And I have no idea how is all that related to prosperity -- prosperity is neither religious nor moral concept.

      You seem to have missed my point. You are claiming that a religious person can act immoral without worrying about an eternal consequence--either way they are going to heaven. How is this different from an atheist? They can act immoral without worrying about an eternal consequence--either way they are maggot food. Your argument is illogical. According to your premise, neither the theist nor the atheist has a reason to act moral or immoral--the eternal consequence is the same either way

      Consequence to the person is not the only consequence of the person's actions. Indeed I do not expect the fear/expectation of consequences to himself to be a base of a moral decision -- one can not make a moral choice unless he is considering the consequences of his action beyond his person. I also have no idea where "eternal" part came from -- atheists do not believe that any part of them is eternal, but they are quite sure that the universe will likely to exist even after they will be dead. A person that only considers what will help or hurt him is not moral even if he can be coerced into doing something positive by a fear of divine retribution and expectation of rewards from god, and even that does not work if the religion gives an easy cop-out through a simple mental self-conditioning procedure. A truly moral person may need guidance, but certainly has no use for sticks and carrots held by a supernatural being.

      No, I wouldn't expect that you do. You do not seem to have any appreciation for the revolutionary ideas they had, and for the virtuous country they created.

      I merely recognize the limitations of both. Their ideas were revolutionary compared to British Empire's idea of having the whole continents as colonies, however it was nothing outstanding in the context of the millennia of human history before them and centuries after. And the country that they have created is mostly filled with things other than virtue -- in fact everything even remotely good that happened here (from abolition of slavery to various developments in art and science) was the result of long and painful struggle of various groups of people against the establishment, same establishment that seen itself as the rightful heir of everything the founders of this country did, and same establishment that accepted the fruits of that struggle as great parts of american history later. True secularization of the political life and the society as a whole will be one of those things.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    31. Re:Terrible News by leodegan · · Score: 1

      I am talking about the application of Occam's razor to theory and evidenvce, not merely the possibility to explain the evidence.

      What? In what way do you apply Occam's razor to the evidence that does not seek out an explanation of the evidence?

      The influence on the outcome is used merely a concept in a thought experiment -- its significance is in causing the impossibility to observe something, not in actual influence on the experiment, that is without an attempt to observe is nonexistent.

      Wrong. The observer genuinely influences the outcome based on what the observer chooses to measure. We cannot know for certain a particles position and momentum at the same instant. By choosing to measure the position precisely, we force more uncertainty in the momentum, and visa versa.

      I already have very little interest in this debate as long as it is littered with your emotional outbursts.

      I would like to challenge this statement. Please point out my emotional outburst in my comment in question. It seems to me that you assume anyone who is religious bases their opinions on emotion and not logic. On the other hand, I can only interpret your arguments against religion as emotionally driven because I cannot identify more than a shred of logic in them. You spout ideas that are shallow and unfounded and discuss topics with authority of which you only have a peripheral knowledge.

      I claim that politicians are not necessarily good philosophers, and that politicians' desisions do not automatically validate all philosophical doctrines and beliefs that those politicians supported.

      I would not consider "not necessarily" and the "not automatically" to be strong commitments to your point of view. You are backpedaling.

      Only if "common sense" is to consider philosophy and politics to be one and the same.

      Not one in the same, but very much related. You have a way of twisting my words to squirm your way out of a pin.

      You have made your own definition of "mechanical" based on your belief, and then used it to "prove" this belief. This is why your argument is circular -- your definitions already contain your desired outcome.

      What are you talking about? I conceded that my belief could not be proven before you accused me of a circular argument. Stop accusing me of things I didn't do.

      The self-awareness is a property of the structure that those particles reflect -- the nature of the particles is irrelevant

      Irrelevant? According to a materialist, every outcome of the "self-awareness" is driven by the nature of those particles. Otherwise you would be suggesting that our consciousness is not subject to the laws of physics.

      I do not choose my location to express the approval or disapproval of various beliefs and tradition of societies and policies of governments.

      I don't believe it. What exactly are your criteria for where you live that are not at all based on the beliefs, traditions and policies of where you live?

      Of course, it was. What do you think, was the whole Cold War about?

      I don't disagree that there was any propaganda, but to assume that all cultures are equal and any difference is the result of a misrepresentation of the culture is ignorant.

      Because it sucks more now, and because I am a programmer, so I have nothing to do in a country with infrastructure destroyed by misguided "free market" proponents.

      Uh huh, sure. But it doesn't have anything to do with the ideology of the people, right? After all, you seem to believe the peoples' philosophies and values do not make an impact on the success or prosperity of their society. What makes a society successful then? Blind luck?

      No, I just think, a religious person has religion placed above any other possible source of ethical norms or morals.

      Religion is not above morality; it is a study of morality. I can only interpret your statements in that you have very ignorant, hateful, and juvenile view of religion.

      Consequence to the person is not the only consequence of the person's actions. Indeed I do not expect the fear/expectation of consequences to himself to be a base of a moral decision -- one can not make a moral choice unless he is considering the consequences of his action beyond his person.

      Agreed. This is what religion is all about. Why would an atheist make a moral choice that does not in any way benefit them?

      I also have no idea where "eternal" part came from -- atheists do not believe that any part of them is eternal

      I know.... That is the point. Atheists believe that no part of them is eternal, and therefore, they have no eternal motive (or no motivation for eternal consequences).

      A truly moral person may need guidance, but certainly has no use for sticks and carrots held by a supernatural being.

      You are changing your story. At first you said religious people can do what ever they want because they will always get saved in the end. Now you are claiming that they need to be moral in order to get the "carrot". Which one is your honest misconception of religion? Your arguments are contradictory. You are simply spouting any anti-religious rhetoric you can think of.

      And the country that they have created is mostly filled with things other than virtue

      You can say that about any culture. Relatively speaking, the US has been the leader in freedom and civil liberty for the past few centuries. Do you not believe freedom and liberty are virtuous?

      in fact everything even remotely good that happened here (from abolition of slavery to various developments in art and science) was the result of long and painful struggle of various groups of people against the establishment

      I am curious what developments in art and science you are talking about.

      In any case, the founders of this country did not introduce slavery. Slavery was prevalent in all modern cultures during that time. Slavery and anti-civil liberties were not part of their revolutionary change. Instead, the revolt against slavery and anti-civil liberties was a revolt against a tradition that had been around for thousands of years.

      True secularization of the political life and the society as a whole will be one of those things.

      When I was younger, I was an agnostic. Several years ago I started reading philosophy and made the following observations:

      - Atheistic philosophers were generally malevolent and aggressive (such as Nietzsche and Marx)
      - Theistic philosophers were generally thoughtful and rational (such as Pascal, Kant, and Descartes)

      I have since came to my own conclusions that a society must be spiritual in order to be healthy.

    32. Re:Terrible News by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      What? In what way do you apply Occam's razor to the evidence that does not seek out an explanation of the evidence?

      Occam's razor can be only applied to a theory, not the evidence. We are talking about theories' validity, not evidence.

      Wrong. The observer genuinely influences the outcome based on what the observer chooses to measure. We cannot know for certain a particles position and momentum at the same instant. By choosing to measure the position precisely, we force more uncertainty in the momentum, and visa versa.

      No. The observer _WOULD_ influence the outcome if he observed it. However in the absence of observers things still behave in a way that observable and unobservable can't be even assumed to exist at the same time. If we claim that unobservable things actually do not exist, we end up with minimalistic theory that matches the evidence. Otherwise we end up guessing what unobservable things "really" are.

      I would like to challenge this statement. Please point out my emotional outburst in my comment in question.

      Soviet Union-related "argument", various extensions to "what is moral" arguments, various mentioning "how can you deny"..., appeal to "authority" of scientists and politicians, etc.

      It seems to me that you assume anyone who is religious bases their opinions on emotion and not logic.

      Logic is a tool, and it is as good as the assumptions it's based on. Religious people's assumptions are based on their emotional attachment to religious dogmas, and on that base all logic in the world can't produce anything other than more religious text.

      On the other hand, I can only interpret your arguments against religion as emotionally driven because I cannot identify more than a shred of logic in them. You spout ideas that are shallow and unfounded and discuss topics with authority of which you only have a peripheral knowledge.

      My logic is consistent, my assumptions that I make simply do not agree with yours ones. I challenge your arguments not based on their internal inconsistencies but on their applicability (ex: you defining "mechanical" and "materialist" point of view as it suits you, turning them into circular argument and a strawman) and being reasonable (ex: Occam's razor).

      I would not consider "not necessarily" and the "not automatically" to be strong commitments to your point of view. You are backpedaling.

      Don't cry victory where there is none, and don't attribute to me a strawman's point of view. I do not claim that politicians don't know philosophy, I merely claim that they really, really suck as philosophers.

      Not one in the same, but very much related. You have a way of twisting my words to squirm your way out of a pin.

      Just as much related as, say, the electric conductivity of lead and the act of murder -- both may have something to do with bullets.

      What are you talking about? I conceded that my belief could not be proven before you accused me of a circular argument. Stop accusing me of things I didn't do.

      Then why is it there? To claim your moral superiority?

      Irrelevant? According to a materialist, every outcome of the "self-awareness" is driven by the nature of those particles.

      "Materialist point of view" contains nothing of the sort. This is strawman.

      Otherwise you would be suggesting that our consciousness is not subject to the laws of physics.

      Consciousness itself is not a subject of the laws of physics, only objects that contain it are. Big difference.

      I don't believe it. What exactly are your criteria for where you live that are not at all based on the beliefs, traditions and policies of where you live?

      My abilities to lead a productive life at that location for the benefit of the advancement of humanity as a whole, of course. The society's and government's flaws and advantages to not necessarily directly translate to this as flaws and advantages, history is full of examples where people who lived in deeply flawed societies made great contribution to art, science and other historically meaningful activities.

      Uh huh, sure. But it doesn't have anything to do with the ideology of the people, right? After all, you seem to believe the peoples' philosophies and values do not make an impact on the success or prosperity of their society. What makes a society successful then? Blind luck?

      At the extent of 30-minutes newscast -- ideology of a journalist and a person who hired him. At the scale of 50-100 years (USSR, post-WWII US) -- mostly luck. At the extent of centuries and millennia -- society's capacity of self-improvement.

      Religion is not above morality; it is a study of morality. I can only interpret your statements in that you have very ignorant, hateful, and juvenile view of religion.

      Acceptance of an authority is not a study.

      Agreed. This is what religion is all about. Why would an atheist make a moral choice that does not in any way benefit them?

      Because he wants to. Any moral person would.

      You are changing your story. At first you said religious people can do what ever they want because they will always get saved in the end. Now you are claiming that they need to be moral in order to get the "carrot".

      I have never said that those sticks and carrots actually work well.

      Which one is your honest misconception of religion? Your arguments are contradictory. You are simply spouting any anti-religious rhetoric you can think of.

      I merely talk about the basic premises of religious teaching when stripped from various decorations.

      You can say that about any culture.

      You have called a country virtuous, not me.

      Relatively speaking, the US has been the leader in freedom and civil liberty for the past few centuries.

      Only Americans think that.

      Do you not believe freedom and liberty are virtuous?

      As the concept and a goal -- yes. US is nowhere close to achieving them at the extent that it can claim to be virtuous.

      I am curious what developments in art and science you are talking about. In any case, the founders of this country did not introduce slavery. Slavery was prevalent in all modern cultures during that time.

      If "that time" was ten centuries ago I would agree. By the time when US was formed slavery was not a part of world's accepted practices anymore.

      Slavery and anti-civil liberties were not part of their revolutionary change. Instead, the revolt against slavery and anti-civil liberties was a revolt against a tradition that had been around for thousands of years.

      So?.

      When I was younger, I was an agnostic. Several years ago I started reading philosophy and made the following observations: - Atheistic philosophers were generally malevolent and aggressive (such as Nietzsche and Marx) - Theistic philosophers were generally thoughtful and rational (such as Pascal, Kant, and Descartes) I have since came to my own conclusions that a society must be spiritual in order to be healthy.

      What kind of argument is that? Appeal to authority, combined with an ad-hominem attack?

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  90. I am not sure..... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    But most people want this, so why not make an exception.

    I am not Christian and I think it is a good thing. People need faith in something, whether that is aliens or god or whatever. You live longer, are more moral, and generally do better if you belive in something.

    1. Re:I am not sure..... by simetra · · Score: 2

      It doesn't matter if "MOST" people want this. Freedom is for everyone, even those in the minority.

      --

      "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
    2. Re:I am not sure..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, change it to "One nation, under aliens,...".
      No problem.

    3. Re:I am not sure..... by DeltaSigma · · Score: 1

      I won't argue on the validity of the ideas that various religions ascert. However it is simple under psychological and sociological study to determine that most followers of almost any religion use it as a "crutch" in life. It's something to help them through the day. It's like a cigarette, but with a much better feeling. You see the bulk of our nation is under the belief that they may confess/repent and "try really hard not to do it again," and thus they shall go to heaven. They escape punishment and escape moral responsibility, this is a belief that many atheists share--that of christians and other xianistic faiths shedding responsibility through their faith.

      Myself, I'm not anything at the moment. I'm researching religions trying to decide what/if I believe. This does not mean that I act without morals. I act on many morals. They're easy to establish in any society, but especially a society with as much communication as ours. In the end, I believe it's more difficult to create your own set of self-governing rules and standards and live by them than it is to live by someone elses and follow them based upon something one could not possibly prove...

    4. Re:I am not sure..... by Stonehand · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nonsense. Merely considering the rational consequences of behavior leads to numerous morals -- for instance, it's quite reasonable to believe that allowing the arbitrary seizure of other people's property by force would lead to societal breakdown, anarchy, and factional rule. Permitting arbitrary homicide has similar consequences. And so forth. There's no compelling need to believe in something irrational like deities, aliens, or the animist nature spirits, for that matter.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    5. Re:I am not sure..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just find it annoying seeing all these people, many of them intelligent believing in fairy tales and nonsense.

      Oh, and the fact that as part of their silly mythical beliefs they just *have* to oppress me and my girlfriend for being in love.

    6. Re:I am not sure..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pardon me if I decide to not trust your no-doubt flexible, tepid, and entirely self-serving "self determined moral system"

    7. Re:I am not sure..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At one time, most people in this country were in favor of slavery. That didn't make it right, or Constitutional.

    8. Re:I am not sure..... by Starcub · · Score: 1

      So what if the govt. does something I don't like and I don't feel like saying the pledge, does that mean nobody else should be able to say the pledge? Perhaps the entire pledge should be done away with.

    9. Re:I am not sure..... by jeeryg_flashaccess · · Score: 1

      You live longer, are more moral, and generally do better if you belive in something.

      Um...where did you happen to pull those statements from? Do you have a link or two for us?

      You live longer? Why? If that's true then sign me up!

      More moral? A lot of wars are caused by religion. (no link needed, taught in school)

      Generally do better? LOL. Do better in/on what? Religious tests?

      To loosely quote another poster today: Karma will overcome your dogma.

      Greg

      --
      Life is like pants... fit in or you don't fit in.
  91. Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    thank god they're are still a few non-reactionaries in the world!

  92. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  93. Not Separation of Church and State by redtoade · · Score: 2, Informative

    The CNN article says:
    " The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the phrase amounts to a government endorsement of religion in violation of the Constitution's Establishment Clause, which requires a separation of church and state. "

    Which is false.

    First Amendment ("Article the Third):
    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    If you read the brief, the court's findings were based more on "free exercise thereof" part of the first amendment, and not so much on the "law respecting an establishment" part.

    According to the brief:

    "Newdow has standing as a parent to challenge a practice that interferes with his right to direct the religious education of his daughter. The mere enactment of the 1954 Act in its particular context constitutes a religious recitation policy that interferes with Newdow's right to direct the religious education of his daughter. Accordingly, we hold that Newdow has standing to challenge the 1954 Act."

    Of course this finding enforces an individuals right to practice religion as he/she sees fit... and not so much so this "anti-Christian" slant that CNN printed:

    "I'm an American citizen. I don't like my rights infringed upon by my government," he said in an interview. Newdow called the pledge a "religious idea that certain people don't agree with."

    Ironically, the court found that Newdow's ability to religiously educate his daughter in the ways of Atheism were being infringed by the pledge.

  94. U.S. currency illegal for income taxes? by sethrab · · Score: 1

    Ss U.S. Currency contains the phrase "In God We Trust"...and God is now unconstituional... does it not follow that we must pay our income taxes with pesos, or simlar?

    Wait, hmm, does this not also make the constitution unconstitional? Boggle...

    1. Re:U.S. currency illegal for income taxes? by kst · · Score: 1

      Nobody is saying that "God is now unconstitutional"; perhaps you'd care to explain where you got that idea. What's unconstitutional is government advocacy of religion.

      And yes, printing "In God We Trust" on our currency is equally unconstitutional, in my opinion. Courts have ruled otherwise, but -- well, they're wrong. Courts have made mistakes before.

      Unfortunately, I expect the Supreme Court to overturn this ruling. The only question is whether they'll bother to read it first.

  95. Judge Goodwin by stud9920 · · Score: 1
    "A profession that we are a nation 'under God' is identical, for Establishment Clause purposes, to a profession that we are a nation 'under Jesus,' a nation 'under Vishnu,' a nation 'under Zeus,' or a nation 'under no god,' because none of these professions can be neutral with respect to religion," Judge Alfred T. Goodwin wrote for the three-judge panel.
    Will this ruling be remebered as "Goodwin's Law" ?
  96. Change it to... by Steveftoth · · Score: 1

    in money we trust.... or maybe power...

    or for you carlin fans.. how about joe pesci?

  97. Boy are you guys confused. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boy are you guys confused.

    First off, the US has been "getting it right" for 200 years. That's why eveyone wants to come here.

    Secondly, conservativism is the antithesis of facism. Conservatism is ALL about the protection of individual liberties. It's the liberals that are intolerant of other opinions and are all gung-ho about an expanded government. The liberals are all for free-speech ... except when they're in charge.

    Wake up.

  98. it's kinda strange by sereanarae · · Score: 1

    that the only people who would technically be offended by the pledge would be atheists, and yet you would think that atheists wouldn't care about that "under god" clause because they believe in no higher being.

    it's kinda like being offended by mayan and incan gods, when you don't even believe in them...

    1. Re:it's kinda strange by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 3, Insightful

      and yet you would think that atheists wouldn't care about that "under god" clause because they believe in no higher being.

      Hardly. I'm Jewish. Now imagine how I'd feel if "under Jesus" was in the PoA. I don't believe in Jesus as the messiah, but I'd be pissed as hell. Same thing.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    2. Re:it's kinda strange by elmegil · · Score: 1
      You don't seem to recognize that there are plenty of other groups offended, but they're so easily marginalized that it's up to the athiests (as the most vocal, organized, and generally accepted of these groups) to actually make something like this succeed.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    3. Re:it's kinda strange by Jobe_br · · Score: 1

      There are religions that are not monotheistic. The judge stated that "under God" implies a judeo-Christian monotheism that is inappropriate.

      As for atheists not being offended, I doubt it. Many atheists do not acknowledge a higher being (as you stated) and so being forced to recite an incantation that acknowledges a higher being ("one Nation, under God") goes against that in a rather severe way.

      Baseline is pretty simple, really: the gov't. should govern, it should not dictate morals, spirituality, or anything of that type. It should govern in such a way that WE (the citizens) are able to practice our spiritual beliefs, where they do not conflict with the greater good (human sacrifice, etc.)

      Recent "moral" policies that have come up (e.g. married mothers on welfare should receive more $$ than single mothers) are dangerous to say the least. Such is also the case with this. The framers of our constitution did a number of things that hind-sight has shown to be not entirely perfect, however, decreeing that there shall be an absolute separation of church and state was not one of those areas.

      Just my $0.02, really :)

    4. Re:it's kinda strange by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Hardly. I'm Jewish. Now imagine how I'd feel if "under Jesus" was in the PoA. I don't believe in Jesus as the messiah, but I'd be pissed as hell. Same thing.
      You can't be pissed as hell.

      You're jewish, and jews don't believe in hell...

    5. Re:it's kinda strange by phutureboy · · Score: 2

      it's up to the athiests (as the most vocal, organized, and generally accepted of these groups) to actually make something like this succeed.

      Do you really think there is any significant population of atheists in the U.S.? Most surveys I have seen indicate that less than 1% of the population here labels themselves as atheist. A recent Newsweek article had a bunch of charts and graphs illustrating the breakdown of religious beliefs in the U.S., and atheist/agnostic did not even show up as a blip.

      I know that as an atheist I feel very much alone in my area, to the point where it's not something I would mention publically (cept on /.) for fear of getting tarred and feathered. In fact, I don't even know any other atheists.

      Does anyone know of a reliable online source listing the prevalence of atheism in the U.S. and/or other parts of the world?

    6. Re:it's kinda strange by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      I've seen figures that range between 1% and 10%, so I'm not sure if there really is a good answer.

      One problem might be atheists who don't quite realise it -- they've bought into the false definition of atheism presented by theists who try to attach all kinds of trappings like an anti-Christian attitude or acceptance of specific philisophical tenets, and because they simply lack belief in any gods (which is the only defining quality of an atheist) they call themselves "agnostic" or "no answer".

      Just a guess, though.

      Personally I'm not shy about my lack of belief in gods. That is, I won't pretend to believe just to make other people comfortable; I don't go out of my way to mention it but if someone asks about my relationship with $DEITY I won't hesitate to tell them that I don't accept the existence of $DEITY as fact.

    7. Re:it's kinda strange by MoneyT · · Score: 2

      Except it doesn't say "under Jesus". It says "under God" which the Jewish believe in.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    8. Re:it's kinda strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? I truly can't imagine why people don't just drop it. Jesus as the messiah -- contested! What a crock.

    9. Re:it's kinda strange by mplex · · Score: 1


      You mention that the govt. should not be involved with moral issues. I argue that most laws are drawn up over moral issues. Murder is an easy one, but everything from tax evasion to speeding is made morally wrongin the eyes the law (where it really counts). They are the great source of morals in this country, instilled by the education system and society in general. Whatever is legal goes, right??? We can have personal moral convictions about certain practices, but the secular law has essentially become the moral force in this country, replacing the antiquated scare tactics of the church.

    10. Re:it's kinda strange by grytpype · · Score: 2

      I can tell you that among the professional class in the Northeast United States, athiesm is widespread. Hardly anyone I know takes religion seriously. I'm sure there are regions and social strata that are more religious.

      --

      - Have a picture

    11. Re:it's kinda strange by sconeu · · Score: 2

      I think he was using it as an example.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    12. Re:it's kinda strange by dotslash · · Score: 1

      Check out the Freedom from Religion Foundation. You are not alone my friend.

    13. Re:it's kinda strange by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      There are plenty of theists who don't believe in God. Ever heard of Shinto? For that matter, various Buddhist sects disagree about a supreme being.

      And, as an atheist I do find it damn offensive when people try to get me to go along with their stupid delusions.

    14. Re:it's kinda strange by cheeto · · Score: 1

      People who call themselves agnostic are just lazy. They say that they believe that there must be some higher power, but the just don't know what it is yet.

      I would theorize that they have not taken the time to really think things through and that they are actually waiting to make a death bed conversion so that they can enjoy life in the mean time.

      --
      - "Sweet merciful crap!" Homer J. Simpson
    15. Re:it's kinda strange by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      The "official" explanation around alt.atheism is thus:

      Atheism implies a lack of belief in deities. "Weak" atheism implies nothing more than withheld belief based on lack of evidence or ignorance of the concept. "Strong" atheism implies the outright assertion "there are no gods". Many monotheistic people incorrectly assume that atheism is the assertion that "there is no God", ignoring that an atheist lacks belief in all deities, not just one popular one.

      Agnosticism is the belief that there is no way to know if a god exists or not. It is thus orthagonal to atheism/theism, an agnostic could have "faith" that a deity exists and be a theist or an agnostic could lack "faith" in any deities and thus be an atheist.

      It's fun educating new fundies who barge into the newsgroup to tell us what we "believe" when in truth the only commonality amongst atheists is a lack of a belief.

    16. Re:it's kinda strange by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      I have to ask, how can you justify athiesm? Isn't it at least 0.00000000000 00000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000001% possible that there might possibly be a god of some sort, even if it's not even close to what is preached by the standard religions?

      I haven't been able to come up with a proof that 100% proved god dosen't exist, so how can I say with certainty that he does not. Is there a rebutal to this that I am unaware of?

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    17. Re:it's kinda strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's probably deism or agnostism(sp?), athiesm requires either apathy or conviction that there isn't a god for certain.

      Around here, going to church is something you do to advance at work, and no other reason. I doubt it's much diffrent anywhere else in the us.

    18. Re:it's kinda strange by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      Well, I don't claim with certainty that absolutely no gods of any kind exist. Barring any evidence for any, however, I assume the existence of none.

      That makes me a "weak" atheist by the definitions that I provided above. That is how I "justify" my atheism.

    19. Re:it's kinda strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but theism means belief in God. what you mean is that there are plenty of religions who don't believe in God.

    20. Re:it's kinda strange by blair1q · · Score: 2

      I'm an atheist, I'm pissed. How about we put "there is no god" in the Pledge?

      --Blair
      "Equal Time, at least."

    21. Re:it's kinda strange by mpe · · Score: 2

      Atheism implies a lack of belief in deities. "Weak" atheism implies nothing more than withheld belief based on lack of evidence or ignorance of the concept. "Strong" atheism implies the outright assertion "there are no gods".

      A "strong atheist" can be someone who has a great deal of faith in his or her position.

    22. Re:it's kinda strange by Krow10 · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:
      I have to ask, how can you justify athiesm? Isn't it at least [very small non-zero percent] possible that there might possibly be a god of some sort, even if it's not even close to what is preached by the standard religions?

      I haven't been able to come up with a proof that 100% proved god dosen't exist, so how can I say with certainty that he does not. Is there a rebutal to this that I am unaware of?
      Atheism isn't a claim of certainty that no gods exist (though some do make this claim -- usually based on a limited defintion of the term "god.") It is an absence of a belief the existence of gods. In my specific case, it is not the relatively few gods in whose existence I actively disbelieve that makes me an atheist; it is the infinite pantheon in whose existence I don't positively believe. Sure, there might be some god hiding in some gap somewhere, but I see no reason to think so. And in the meantime, I'll live my life exactly as if no gods exist.

      -Craig
      --
      Corollary to Clarke's Third Law: Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
    23. Re:it's kinda strange by Jordy · · Score: 2

      Religions that do not believe in god are by definition, atheists.

      A theist is simply someone who believes in a deity or supreme being, nothing more, nothing less.

      Most Buddhists for instance should be considered atheists since Buddha (or Buddhas depending on the sect) was not a god but a man who reached nirvana. (Note many Buddhist are also Taoists.)

      Shinto on the other hand does believe in deities known as Kami, but they aren't omnipowerful. Whether or not Shinto is theist or atheist is up for debate.

      There are many atheist religions out there. The idea that atheists are without a value system (essentially what religions such as Confusionism and Buddhism are) is silly.

      --
      The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
  99. All I can say is... by Tyrone+Slothrop · · Score: 1

    Thank god :-) The sooner govt and religion is severed throughout the world, the better.

  100. Even without "under God"... by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

    No child should be forced to pledge allegiance to the U.S. My love for this country notwithstanding, there are many valid reasons for a person to not love it.

    "Love it or leave it" would be a reasonable response to someone who has the ability to leave. Schoolage kids don't have that ability.

    1. Re:Even without "under God"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. If you need to FORCE children to pledge allegiance to your country and your god, then your country AND your God are not worthy of allegiance.

  101. New moderation thingy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TASTELESS (Bite me!! :0)

  102. This by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why republicans want to privatize the schools. Not becuase the market does a better job at allocating resources. Oh yes Enron and Worldcom really worked wonders. No it's becuase if all the schools are privatized there's nothing unconstitutional about stuffing jesus down everyones throat.

    BTW What does this have to do with news for nerds?

  103. Re:Yikes. Just yikes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    trolling to burn karma are yaz?

  104. It is time to pull up our collective diaper. by Coreigh · · Score: 0

    This kind of shit really pisses me off. If we allow this to continue we won't have a country anymore. In my eyes this is FAR MORE DESTRUCTIVE to our liberties and freedom than any terrorist attack OR direct aggression from another country. We need to stand up for what we BELIEVE IN and be a *little bit* less worried about hurting somone's feelings. The men and women who founded and built this country all believed in *something*. It happens to be worded "...one nation under God..." It DOESN'T say "... if you don't believe in God then shove-off!"

    Take a stand, believe in something, accept the fact that *small minded* people will *think* their feeling are hurt by your beliefs.

    "it's time to put a stop to all this P.C. CRAP and start acting like Americans."

    --



    "Waitress I need two more boat-drinks..."
  105. won't last by circletimessquare · · Score: 2

    the circuit court that ruled this (i think it is the ninth?) is in san francisco and is known for being pretty liberal.

    an atheist didn't like that his daughter would be socially ostracised by fellow students because she sat down while the rest of the students would recite.

    their decision will most definitely go to the supreme court and will probably be overturned.

    but um... this is a slashdot story? strange bit of news for slashdot, no? "news for nerds, stuff that matters" :P

    i didn't know the slashdot crowd cared so much about the separation of church and state, not really a geeky issue...

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:won't last by Ex-Parrot · · Score: 1

      A great many people seem to believe this is "stuff that matters."

      --
      To many, total abstinence is easier than perfect moderation. -- St. Augustine
    2. Re:won't last by Sloppy · · Score: 2

      the circuit court that ruled this (i think it is the ninth?) is in san francisco and is known for being pretty liberal.

      The liberal position is for the government to tell people how to live, for their own good.

      The conservative position is for government to have a lesser role in peoples' lives, so that they must be responsible for their own destinies.

      This is a conservative ruling. Eisenhower's modification to the pledge was a liberal act.

      Hint for the confused: "Republican" and "Conservative" are not synonyms.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    3. Re:won't last by The+Evil+Plush+Toy · · Score: 1

      If you haven't noticed, politics seems to be a big thing amoung the "geek" crowd. How many of us have read 1984 or Animal Farm?

      --
      chdir("c:\\con\\con");
    4. Re:won't last by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wrong. A conservative/fascist government trades freedom for security. A liberal/socialist government trades freedom for equality.

    5. Re:won't last by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      By that way of looking at things, environmentalists are conservatives, and presidents who deploy troops in the middle east to keep fuel prices affordable, are liberals.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  106. You can still say it by guanxi · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm sure nobody will stop you from saying "under God" if you want. The point is, the government has no business coercing people to say it who don't want to.

    OTOH, the point someone made about currency is interesting. Maybe we should change it to, "In Greenspan We Trust", or more perhaps more accurately "On Friedman We Rely" or "From Soros We Beg Mercifulness", or "We Sure Don't Trust Those Guys at Andersen Anymore".

    1. Re:You can still say it by mselmeci · · Score: 1

      In Enron We Trust (Or We Used To)

  107. Why the pledge was wrong... by dameron · · Score: 1

    The portion, "under God" clearly violates the separation between church and state. The states that have enacted laws requiring students to recite the pledge are effectively forcing children to swear an oath and in the process subscribe to an unspecified but clearly religious figure (God). The calls for amending the words to include "your God" or "my God" miss the point. It's unconstitutional for a federally funded institution (public schools) to require students to ascribe, or even claim to ascribe, to any one specific religous belief system, or any at all for that matter.

    I know some children are excluded from having to recite the pledge (Jehovah's Witnesses for example), but the act of exclusion only highlights these children as being different. Making laws to force kids to say the pledge lends the authority and approval of the state and federal government to the words it contains. "Alliegence", "flag", "nation", and "republic" all seem fine. But what's "God" got to do with it?

    -dameron

  108. Technically by sheepab · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Arent they all gods? I mean, a form of god. Its not like the pledge says under THE god. Or worse, Under the ONE and ONLY god. God people lighten up!

    1. Re:Technically by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Arent they all gods?
      I'm an atheist. How does "under god" (for any value of god) apply?

    2. Re:Technically by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Actually, the PoA does refer to "THE G-d". It uses the capitalized form "G-d", which refers to the monotheistic Judeo-Christian-Islamic diety, though Muslims would say "Allah", and Jews would probably use JHVH, or some euphemism such as Hashem or Hakadosh Baruch Hu.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    3. Re:Technically by sheepab · · Score: 2

      Everyone believes in the god of sex, believe in that god :).

    4. Re:Technically by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How DARE you speak my name without the formal "His Masturbatory" title?


      Your pal,

      His Masturbatory God Of Sex

    5. Re:Technically by Uggy · · Score: 2

      Does that mean that German speaking people wouldn't be able to differentiate between the two?

      --
      Toddlers are the stormtroopers of the Lord of Entropy.
    6. Re:Technically by Alexius · · Score: 2

      (I was going to email you privately, but your address isn't posted.)

      It is saying 'the one god', since It's singular, and it is saying 'the only' by omitting the rest.

      Besides, I don't have a god. I have a Goddess. The pledge, as it stands, makes no allowance for her.

      What if I had no god, as the one who brought the suit? Why do I have to believe in any god?

      What if I have two gods? It is singular, and accepting that the nation is under 'god' means that one of my gods is slighted.

      And also, what if I believed in a system where god wasn't above, but that the anti-god for me was? To use chritian names: What if I worshipped Satan, below us in Hell, and thought of Jahova (sp?), above us in Heaven as evil? Saying this would promote evil to me.

      I converted to Paganism in my senior year of highschool. At the same time I stopped saying the pledge. My teacher noticed I was sitting during it, and sent me to the principals. The principal asked me why, then called my mother. My mother took the news uninterested. (She was/is a wonderful mother, she just didn't care that I didn't say the pledge, that was my choice, she told me later). I was sent back to class, where my teacher dispised me for the rest of the year.

      --
      `Lex - Find Me Here: Text Appeal
    7. Re:Technically by mbbac · · Score: 1

      It uses "God" as a proper noun, not "god" as a pronoun. Plus, you're forgetting atheists and agnostics.

      Maybe it should say "under trolls".

      --

      mbbac

  109. You missed the point...... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    I think both sides of the issue are wrong, but my point was that Atheists are generally more vocal then Fundies Christians. The first thing most Atheists tell you when you meet them is they don't belive in God. Great, I don't give rats ass, least most Fundies don't start in till they hear you say Fuck or God Damn or talk shit about Jesus.

    As for my language, I try to be a gentlemen, upon occasion, so I tone it down for the Fundie and such. maybe when you have kids you will understand.

    As for modding, I got FUCKING KARMA to burn baby.

    1. Re:You missed the point...... by NiGHTSFTP · · Score: 1

      I've never been in a situation where an Athiest has told me anything about god, or how got is fake, or what have you. So, that I would not know.

      I personally dont believe in god, nor do I wish to associate myself with any groups that are even semi-religious (including athiesm, I lean more towards "I don't give a rats ass about any religious beliefs whatsoever")

      I can sorta see your point about language, but over time, with lots of use, fuck will move into the mainstream.. ever notice the word "bitch" has been widely uncensored since early 2001? Just an observation.

      --
      http://www.angryburrito.com/ The best, completely unfinished software review site ever.
    2. Re:You missed the point...... by dvdeug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The first thing most Atheists tell you when you meet them is they don't belive in God.

      Really? That doesn't accord with the atheists I've met, or what I know about atheist's beliefs. (It's not generally an evangelical belief system.) How do you know - do you take an interview of everyone you meet to find out their religion? Furthermore, I never seen an atheist wear a piece of clothing to proclaim to the world their religion, but I've seen many cross or Star of David necklaces and FROG/WWJD (Fooley rely on God / What would Jesus do) wristbands and other pieces of clothing.

    3. Re:You missed the point...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want a WWTLEDD "what would the lord of eternal darkness do" piece of jewellry.

    4. Re:You missed the point...... by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I'm an atheist. A humanist indeed. I think this is the first time I've mentioned that fact to anyone in two or more years, and mention it solely because it is necessary to defend the position.

      I didn't mention this to my witness collegue at work until he started trying to probe my views (and, hence, try to convert me)

      I do not have a car sticker promoting my beliefs. I live in an area where most cars have those flaming fish symbols or worse on them.

      I have can receive no television channels organised by humanists promoting humanism. This is because there are no such channels. I do receive crystal clear TV channels from Christianists [I know many decent Christians which is why I use the word Christianists to distinguish those fanatical and poisonous individuals who use Christianity as a weapon against those who they do not understand] which promote, endlessly, their view of the world.

      And I've never lobbied the government to insist that people be forced to acknowledge the non-existance of God. There is no speech that people must read stating that "In the absense of a God, we trust in ourselves to be wise." But Christianists in the 50s did indeed the same type of act by lobbying, successfully, for the government to try to force every schoolchild, no natter what their beliefs, to acknowledge the existance of a god - to make a statement that implies a god exists.

      When atheists run TV channels specifically to promote their view of the world, when atheists lobby Congress to forcably promote atheistic views, when atheists cover themselves and their vehicles in stickers promoting their views, perhaps, perhaps, you might be able to claim, successfully, that atheists are as vocal as fundies.

      So far I've seen Christianists attempt to get my taxes into churches. I've seen them attempt to force people to join in organized prayer. I've seen them slice and dice laws to try to get unwarranted and irrelevent references to God in them; and to through the legislative process attempt to have every school display a list of ten statements four of which promote the worship of a god. I've seen the FCC hand over chunks of the broadcasting spectrum to them, a spectrum usually described by the same institution as scarce, usually at the prodding of crackpot Christianist politicians. I've seen Christianists attempt to remove neutral and important subjects such as basic science teachings from school for fear that a rudementary understanding of science might, in some way, undermine their version of "Christian" faith.

      And against all of this, I've seen one or two brave individuals stand up against the crowd and say "Enough". Sometimes they're Jewish, sometimes they're Catholic. And occasionally they're atheist. And every time someone stands, the Christianists go on the attack. They'll downright lie about what's being stood up against, they'll promote the idea of a sinister conspiracy by those who'd defend the constitution, they'll accuse, as George HW Bush did, those opposing the forcable support of religion of being unpatriotic, of being "unamerican". And of being extremists.

      So be careful who you accuse of being more "vocal". It may be that the voices that sound the loudest are those that are not part of the babble, and the babble is the loudest of all.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    5. Re:You missed the point...... by CommandNotFound · · Score: 1

      ...I never seen an atheist wear a piece of clothing to proclaim to the world their religion...


      Counterpoint: ever see the little "Darwin" car emblems, spoofing the christian fish? Not only is it proudly espousing the (non)beliefs of the driver, but doing so with a stinging parody of the latter.

    6. Re:You missed the point...... by dvdeug · · Score: 2

      Counterpoint: ever see the little "Darwin" car emblems, spoofing the christian fish

      Sure. But they aren't clothing - in many ways, it's considerably more anonymous than clothing, as you're usually either hidden behind the wheel or no where near your car. In any case, a lot of cars have religious stickers on them, and the Darwin emblem is hardly a clear statement of your faith; one could be athiest, agnostic, Buddist or even Christain (say, a biology teacher) and have one on your care.

    7. Re:You missed the point...... by alanak · · Score: 1

      The first thing most Atheists tell you when you meet them is they don't belive in God

      I'm an atheist. I just finished living with my roommmate for 9 months (and he happened to be a very devout christian for that matter) and I believe he still doesn't know that I'm an atheist.

      I believe you have no idea what you're are talking about.

    8. Re:You missed the point...... by danro · · Score: 2

      Sure. But they aren't clothing

      A friend of mine spent a year in the US.
      He used to wear a "Darwin Fish" t-shirt.
      (Yes, he got into a lot of trouble for it.)

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    9. Re:You missed the point...... by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Sadly, it has taken me this far down in the comments to find a self-proclaimed aethist who didn't call my religious belief a belief in the supernatural, a creation myth, or just plain stupidity.

      I have no problem with aetheists, and I certainly speak very little about religion except with my wife and my newly ordained friend. It was annoying reading all those put downs.

      Even if you do think I'm silly for my beliefs, I just wanted to thank you for not mocking. I was starting to think that aetheists in general are jerks (I only know 1 in real life- my best friend. irony) until I came across your post. Thankfully, I was wrong.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  110. good. by kevin+lyda · · Score: 2

    my dad always complained about the under god bit. it's not the pledge he learned in school. it wasn't just unethical to shove god down people's throats, it messed up the rhythm of the pledge.

    it's nice to know that some people in america still understand how to fight the hard fight for freedom against meanness, ignorance and bigotry.

    --
    US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
  111. America by abigor · · Score: 2

    You know, it's always nice to see America take a step forward. For all the crying conservatives do about liberalism "destroying" their country, America has progressively become more and more free (in a civil majority sense) with each passing decade. Women can do what they wish, gays aren't persecuted, non-Christians aren't reviled, and so forth. Anachronisms such as state-enforced pledges to God are better removed; keep religion out of institutions.

    Now...if only we in Canada could fix our stupid national anthem! "God keep our land/Glorious and free..." Bah...

    1. Re:America by Spankophile · · Score: 2

      > Now...if only we in Canada could fix our stupid
      > national anthem! "God keep our land/Glorious
      > and free..." Bah...

      I once heard it sung as
      "Oh Canada, Glorious and Free"

      And speaking of problems with the Canadian anthem.. I also remember a complaint about the part involving "In all thy sons command" as being anti-female, and wanting to change it to "In all our _hearts_ command, with glowing _pride_ we see thee rise..."
      (changing hearts to pride in the second line to avoid "heart" duplication I spose...

    2. Re:America by abigor · · Score: 2

      "In all our hearts' command" is kind of weird -- the heart isn't normally associated with command, but whatever. So long as they don't get rid of "The true North, strong and free" -- that part is cool.

    3. Re:America by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Now...if only we in Canada could fix our stupid national anthem! "God keep our land/Glorious and free..." Bah...
      That's because canada's head of state is also the pope of the anglican protestant sect...
    4. Re:America by dadragon · · Score: 2

      Don't forget the first line of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

      "Whereas Canada is founded on principles which recognize the Supremacy of God and Rule of Law"

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
    5. Re:America by dadragon · · Score: 2

      if only we in Canada could fix our stupid national anthem!

      Indeed Maple Leaf Forever (served as Canada's national anthem before O Canada was adopted) is sooooo much better:

      In Days of yore,
      From Britain's shore
      Wolfe the dauntless hero came
      And planted firm Britannia's flag
      On Canada's fair domain.
      Here may it wave,
      Our boast, our pride
      And joined in love together,
      The thistle, shamrock, rose entwined,
      The Maple Leaf Forever.

      [CHORUS]
      The Maple Leaf
      Our Emblem Dear,
      The Maple Leaf Forever.
      God save our Queen and heaven bless,
      The Maple Leaf Forever.

      At Queenston Heights and Lundy's Lane
      Our brave fathers side by side
      For freedom's home and loved ones dear,
      Firmly stood and nobly died.
      And so their rights which they maintained,
      We swear to yeild them never.
      Our watchword ever more shall be
      The Maple Leaf Forever

      [CHORUS]

      Our fair Dominion now extends
      From Cape Race to Nootka Sound
      May peace forever be our lot
      And plenty a store abound
      And may those ties of love be ours
      Which discord cannot sever
      And flourish green for freedom's home
      The Maple Leaf Forever

      [CHORUS]

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
  112. Re: forced to use cash? by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    Uh, actually - no, I don't think your argument would hold a lot of proverbial water.

    It's a nice try... But the mere fact that government mints currency as our official form of "legal tender for all debts, public and private" could mean they can't go around printing references to a god on it.

    True, you're not forced to use cash. These days, people do it less and less. But still, you're not offered any other choices in U.S. currency. It's not like postage stamps, where many different designs are printed and you can pick the type you prefer to stick onto your envelopes.

  113. Gotta give by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

    the love to Alexander Hamilton and the rest of the Federalist Papers authors for that one.

    --
    There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
  114. Simple solution to a complex problem. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 2
    This is totally stupid. The solution is so simple, I am appalled that nobody has thought of it: Simply define the word "God" as a legal term which means both nature (for statements like "acts of God") and a higher authority than the government itself (for statements like "under God"), which is, at the option of each individual, either real or imagined, that when used in any literature, legally serves as an abstract definition. That'll shut up those stupid, fscking liberal pieces of garbage that claim to be human beings, because you can't call a legal definition unconstitutional if it doesn't force you to believe in anything.

    My second comment is that these bleeding heart liberals often cite "The Constitution" (in much the same way that Microsoft users cite "The Computer" when something goes wrong) when it comes to the first amendment about religious freedom. Literally, the text of that amendment is, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances. [Emphasis mine.]" Please note that you can't fscking stop me from saying "Under God" or I'll sue you.

    If Big Brother doesn't implement the Mark of the Beast, these alleged humans (the liberals) will.

    1. Re:Simple solution to a complex problem. by Chris+Parrinello · · Score: 1

      Dude... turn off the computer and turn back on Fox News. They're giving you instructions on how to round up the liberals. Apprently, you can spot them easily because they have to wear eyeglasses due to reading so many books they get their garbage liberal ideas from.

      Oh and the word is "fuck"... not "fsck". If you're going to call somebody's status as a human being into question because of their political views, at least have the balls to actually use the right word.

    2. Re:Simple solution to a complex problem. by dvdeug · · Score: 2

      Simply define the word "God" as a legal term

      It's been tried. The courts correctly recognize it as bullshit.

      these alleged humans (the liberals)

      Alleged humans. Great phrase for a pogrom.

    3. Re:Simple solution to a complex problem. by NiGHTSFTP · · Score: 1

      "Oh and the word is "fuck"... not "fsck". If you're going to call somebody's status as a human being into question because of their political views, at least have the balls to actually use the right word."

      AMEN!

      heh heh.

      --
      http://www.angryburrito.com/ The best, completely unfinished software review site ever.
    4. Re:Simple solution to a complex problem. by jafac · · Score: 2

      How do you know that "under God" and "in God We Trust" aren't the mark of the Beast?
      (under God being the mark on one's forhead - or thoughts, and in God we trust being the mark on your hand, or actions which money can certainly qualify as - also limiting your ability to do commerce.)

      All you have to do is consider the current religion to be the opposite of what they want you to believe it is, and the illusion is complete.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  115. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  116. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  117. Joe Pesci and the new pledge by sterno · · Score: 1

    I my pledge my allegiance
    to the flag
    of the united states of america
    and to the republic
    for which it stands
    one nation
    under JOE PESCI
    indivisible
    with liberty and justice for all except the people that might possibly have considered being a terrorist at some point

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:Joe Pesci and the new pledge by Alsee · · Score: 2

      with liberty and justice for all except the people that might possibly have considered being a terrorist at some point

      You seem to have made a typo. That should read:

      with liberty and justice for all except the people that might be considered as possibly being a terrorist at some point

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:Joe Pesci and the new pledge by BoVLB · · Score: 1
      with liberty and justice for all except the people that might be considered as possibly being a terrorist at some point

      "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others." Animal Farm, George Orwell

      Oh hold on, that was a metaphor for Russia. Never mind!

  118. One nation, under Satan by cpeterso · · Score: 3, Funny


    What if the phrase was changed to "one nation, under Satan"? Would anyone be offended? just maybe..

    1. Re:One nation, under Satan by tshak · · Score: 4, Funny

      It'd probably be a more accurate clause.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    2. Re:One nation, under Satan by nairolF · · Score: 1

      Mammon, actually. Capitalism, not Christianity, is the primary religion in the USA.

      --
      "...Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!"
    3. Re:One nation, under Satan by flimflam · · Score: 2

      Shouldn't it be:

      One nation over Satan?

      --
      -- It only takes 20 minutes for a liberal to become a conservative thanks to our new outpatient surgical procedure!
    4. Re:One nation, under Satan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America and the west are, in general, not capitalist nations. Rather, they are totalitarian nations with a capitalist ideal.

  119. MSNBC Online Poll has interesting stats. by spectecjr · · Score: 2

    Currently, with over 80,000 people having voted, 77% of people think that the pledge should have the wording "Under God" in there, and 23% of people think that it shouldn't.

    Although it may be a coincidence, 77% is pretty much precisely the percentage of people who identified themselves as Christian in the US in 2001. (American Religious Identity Survey, 2001 - sample size, 50,000 people; for more details: http://www.adherents.com/rel_USA.html)

    Funny how it works out that the people who that was put in for in the first place are the ones who think that it should stay in :)

    Simon

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  120. Christian rip-off artists @# +1 ; Insightful #@ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate to inform all of you God- and John Ashcroft
    fearing Republikans, however; Christianity was not original. They hijacked Pagan religious dates and
    claimed them as their own. For instance, ask a
    Christian about Christ's date of birth. There is no documented evidence for Christ's birthday.
    The "Christians' decided to appropriate Dec. 25 (Winter Solstice) from Paganism.

    Furthermore, let's flush ALL religions down the toilet. The idiocy in the Middle East is just an example of how two religious based nation-states are wasting the money, time, and energy of good marijuana-smoking Amerikan rednecks that has been
    appropriated by the Cheney-Rumsfeld administration.

  121. Not sure what country you live in...... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    But last time I checked that whole "freedom" doesn't really apply to everyone, we have plenty of laws that upset a good many people, but they were put in by the MAJORITY. Atheists fall into a very small minirorty, albiet a vocal one, I think there are less proclaimed Athiests then Jews or Hari Krishnas. You will see a grass roots movement against this, as The Gaseous Vertabrate is my witness you will see the Pledge of Allegiance back!!!!

    1. Re:Not sure what country you live in...... by NiGHTSFTP · · Score: 1

      Yes, freedom DOES apply to everyone, except when you are in Jail. At which point you are still covered by the constitution.

      It doesn't matter what nationality you are, either. Step on US soil escaping persecution, bam, you are now governed under US law, and might even be eligable for citizenship. That's basically how I've seen it.

      --
      http://www.angryburrito.com/ The best, completely unfinished software review site ever.
    2. Re:Not sure what country you live in...... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      But last time I checked that whole "freedom" doesn't really apply to everyone, we have plenty of laws that upset a good many people, but they were put in by the MAJORITY.

      Indeed. Most of the time, the majority should and does set the tone. But the brilliance of the Founders was their recognition that there are some freedoms so important, so vital, that they must be protected for everyone, even the unpopular minority. And they weren't just humanitarians. They saw how protecting the minority in the most important cases would lead to increased stability and increased freedom for everyone -- minority and majority alike -- in the long run.


      They were some fine thinkers, then. Pity we don't seem to have the same calibre now.

  122. Alternative method by MilkmanDan · · Score: 1

    Instead of making a court case/big deal out of this, why not simply teach your child that it is ok to adjust or eliminate their recitation of the pledge? Children feel pressure from infinitely many sources to act a certain way or believe certain things, and this is a good opportunity to show them that only they can decide what is right for themselves. It is ok for them to leave out the "under God" part, or to instead pledge alliegance to "Queen Fragg" (thanks Calvin) even if some students or teachers disagree with them. I basically just end up feeling like causing a fuss about this is doing more harm than good. For example, kids are going to notice if they are suddenly instructed that the "under God" part is no longer part of the "official" pledge, which could cause much more "injury in fact" to some christian children than was caused to the daughter of the plaintiff here. If she was being forced to recite the pledge, with the "under God" part, I think it would be a completely different story, but this just seems like throwing rocks at a bee's nest.

  123. Its not just for atheists... by Trinition · · Score: 2

    I completely agree with the atheists point. But I think just considering that will be fighting a losing battle in a country where the majority are monotheists.

    The bigger reason to remove the "under God" clause is to enforce the separation of church and state for secular reasons. Does anyone remember from history class when governments and churches were merged. In such entanglements, religious persecution is possible, and historically, unavoidable. These little creepings of religion back into government ("...under God...", "In God We Trust", 10 commandments, etc.) are the beginnings of a slipperly slope.

    Heh, but why wouldwe want to learn a lesson from history when we can repeat it ourselves!

    1. Re:Its not just for atheists... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Does anyone remember from history class when governments and churches were merged. In such entanglements, religious persecution is possible, and historically, unavoidable.


      But this is exactly the point. Every little way the radical right in this country can get God and Jesus into the government is one step closer to their goal of turning the United States into another Saudi Arabia. Don't for a second believe that this isn't the absolute goal of the right in the USA today.

  124. Is this really an issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Well, I no longer live in the U.S. and my child will not be forced to pledge allegiance to anyone or anything. But as an agnostic atheist (meaning I don't even care if I'm an atheist or not), I don't see religion as anything of any consequence except for when it is responsible for death. 9/11 is an example of the exception. A religious belief (no matter how well or wrongly interpretted the religion was) was responsible for the deaths of many. Each day Israeli's and Palastinians live in fear of one another because of religion.


    I've never objected to the term "Under God" since I don't really believe in God and therefore don't recognize it as being anything more than a goofy phrase implemented for the people who chase their own tails. I can't possibly see myself shedding a tear either way in this decision.


    I do recall however that often times I simply chose to remain seated during the pledge. Those were the days I was feeling more patriotic than others. I believed that my allegiance to my country need not be pledged more than once. In fact, I believe that it is more important for me to pledge my allegiance to my country and countrymen in my own way so that it has more substantial meaning. A daily receited pledge which was written by some dead guy didn't mean much to me. So I chose to sit. When asked why I chose to sit, my answer at one point was "I feel that it is more fitting that I pledge my allegiance to my country in a way which would honor it. I don't believe in your god and therefore this alteration makes it an irrelivant pledge. However do not make the mistake that my patriotic heart is any less than yours. My patriotic heart at least knew well enough to pledge in my own words instead of someone elses.", my answer was accepted in the normal way in which any political issue was accepted at my school. I was sent to the principle's office where I explained my position and received multiple threats. After lieing to get away without any suspension or detention, the following day I commenced in my belief and remained seated. I then explained that I do not pledge my allegiance to a piece of cloth made by a machine probably somewhere in a 3rd world country by children, but instead I pledge my allegiance to my family, my friends and my fellow countrymen. I again was sent to the principal's office where I spent the next 4 days in "In School Suspension".


    After a while had passed, I explained that I could no longer pledge my allegiance to my country since my country insists that I do so in their words and not in my heart. From that experience, I learned that the "Free" country which I was demanded to pledge my allegiance to was shamelessly guilty of not practicing what they preached.


    I still love America, I always will. But now I only love it for 2 week vacations every few months. I'd rather live in a country which is more organized and more educated. My child will grow up here and we will live happily. I will never give up my American citizanship, but I will never love it the way I once naively did as a child.

  125. Declaration of Independence by erewhon · · Score: 1

    I hope no one is forced to read the Declaration of Independence in school. Check out those first 2 paragraphs. :)

    http://www.archives.gov/exhibit_hall/charters_of _f reedom/declaration/declaration_transcription.html

    1. Re:Declaration of Independence by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, the "Founding Fathers"(tm) were white Anglo Saxons, rich (for the most part), christians (for the most part..)

      They were pretty much oblivious to:

      • women
      • blacks
      • anyone not white Anglo Saxon
      • the poor
      • anyone not a christian

      As much as the contemporary white christian power elite (read: Gee Dub Ya and his pals..) can't admit it, this nation is *not* white, christian, and rich.

      Deal with it.

      I can't wait to hear Ashcroft squeal about this one!

      t_t_b

      --
      I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
    2. Re:Declaration of Independence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As much as the contemporary white christian power elite (read: Gee Dub Ya and his pals..) can't admit it, this nation is *not* white, christian, and rich.

      What's unfortunate for you is that the people who are in control of the government ARE white, christian and rich, so that's the direction the country will go.

      Deal with it.

    3. Re:Declaration of Independence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The "creator" is evolution. No mythilogical "god" had anything to do with it. Divine providence can be translated as "sheer luck". It means exactly the same thing.


      Some men look at constitutions with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the ark of the Covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond amendment... laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind... as that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, institutions must advance also, to keep pace with the times.... We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to remain forever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors. and


      "I have examined all the known superstitions of the word, and I do not find in our particular superstition of Christianity one redeeming feature. They are all alike founded on fables and mythology. Millions of innocent men, women and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined and imprisoned. What has been the effect of this coercion? To make one half the world fools and the other half hypocrites; to support roguery and error all over the earth." - Thomas Jefferson


      "The Government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion." - Article 11 of the Treaty of Tipoli, signed by Adams, Washington, and other founding fathers.


      "Religious bondage shackles and debilitates the mind and unfits it for every noble enterprise."
      "During almost fifteen centuries has the legal establishment of Christianity been on trial. What have been its fruits? More or less in all places, pride and indolence in the Clergy, ignorance and servility in the laity, in both, superstition, bigotry and persecution." - James Madison, fourth president and father of the Constitution

    4. Re: Re:Declaration of Independence by Chacham · · Score: 1

      The "creator" is evolution.

      A religion in-and-of-itself.

      Besides, that is quite a stretch.

      No mythilogical "god" had anything to do with it.

      But it was used an the reason for the belief in inalienable rights.

      Divine providence can be translated as "sheer luck". It means exactly the same thing.

      No, it can't, and it isn't.

      Regardless of what their beliefs in organized religion, the push for freedom was rooted in a belief in a deity that created the world. It just seems ironic, that the push for the country it being denied free speech.

    5. Re: Re:Declaration of Independence by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      >The "creator" is evolution.

      A religion in-and-of-itself.


      Sigh. Yet another on who doesn't understand science, the scientific method, and scientific theories.

      -asb

  126. news for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm just not clear what this post is even doing on slashdot. yes, it's news. yes, it's big news. no, it's not news for nerds. or did i miss the bill gates/linux/wormhole angle on this whole thing?

  127. thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by lingqi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like what Eisenhower said. I think it made a lot of sense -- and it is true -- America has grown to be very arrogant over the years, in many ways that i will not be listing here.

    At the mean time -- the pledge of allegiance, added with such a phrase, really does put stress on, i am sure, many people's minds. I, for one, dreaded those occations while in middle school. However, what is more worrisome is not necessarily the people who are made to say it when they do not want to -- they can just "watermelon" under their breath after all; it is, rather, the minds of children coaxed into the belief of God that way -- without ever knowing what it is like to be free to choose one's own religion(s).

    side note -- this will have some serious consequences -- all of the bills we've got have "in god we trust" written on them. i highly doubt the new rainbow series (discussed before under "Greenbacks no more") will do without them.

    But back to the Eisenhower thing. I think it is implemented in the wrong way. His intentions are good, but since then, the phrase has all but lost its meaning, because if it did not, my thread's parent will not be modded to 5:informative. In this vein of thought, i support taking "under God" out of the pledge. put somethig more... abstract in there, if they really wanted (words like "president", "dignity", "humility", "cheeseburgers", etc). maybe run a contest or something, like Maxim's caption contest. Winner gets a chance to go in a ring for a one on one to beat up Bin Laden whenever we capture him (or designate somebody like The Rock, for example. you guys figure it out).

    Last piece of ramble: The most demoralizing aspect of this whole ordeal isn't really about what goes into a pledge, whatever. it's rather the fact that we have so little tolerance for eachother. For "land of the free," it is really hard to be "free" now-a-days without somebody complaining that you doing what you wanna do is violating their freedom in some fringe ways. maybe it should read ... one nation under the principle of tolerance and forgiveness ... ?

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

    1. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by T3kno · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Actually you just sparked something in my mind. Isn't our going after Bin Laden and Al Quaida an infringement on Muslims religios freedom? After all in their eyes we are the great satan, and all they are doing is trying to rid the world of evil. Who is to say what is evil and what is not? With a phrase like one nation under God as a basis for our nations foundation I think we have a very good ground to stand on for retaliating against them, but when you remove God completely from our culture you eliminate any ground we have to stand on.

      Since this has gotten through our courts I think we also need to remove all of the hate crime laws as they favor one persons religious views over another. If my religion tells me to hate homosexuals I should have every right to destroy them, lest the government infringe on my rights. If I am a homosexual and I hate red necks I should be able to do anything I want to them because my homosexual "religion", for lack of a better term, encourages me to do that.

      The point is that when we remove God from our society we remove the need for morals, because a moral code is basically what religion is, and what God represents to many people, therefore government can impose no morals on anyone, this means that there can be no laws at all, because laws are just an enforcement of morals. My religion tells me to smoke crack, rape women, and castrate white males, who is to tell me that I am wrong, certainly not the government, I am merely worshiping the way I choose, and you can not tell me otherwise.

      You do not have to take having a phrase such as "In God We Trust" imprinted on our money as a form of the government imposing a set of views on you, just as a reminder that this nation was founded based on a certian set of beliefs. If you do not like those beliefs then I would suggest going to another country that put's their trust in King, or Queen, or Allah, or Fairy Jim. The point is that those countrys have a moral code that they live by too, and it is based on an idea.

      The problem with this is that you may be able to get God out of society, but you can never get God out of men. Ask yourself why so many people believe in something that CANNOT be tangibly proven? Why some of the most successful, smartest, most powerful people the world has ever known put their faith in a being that has not physically manifested himself in over two thousand years? Because they are stupid? Gullible? Weak, feable minded? I dont know the answer to that question, I dont think anyone does, but removing the word God from our pledge, and from our coinage will not remove God from man.

      I for one enjoy this, to me it just points to a battle that has only one outcome, a battle where one side has already lost. And the closer it gets to the buzzer sounding the more the loser trys to win. So take God out of the pledge, remove him from our money, burn his word, and eventually you will probably kill me for worshiping Him, I dont care, He does.

      Signed,

      A stupid, gullible, weak feable minded person

      --
      (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
    2. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually you just sparked something in my mind. Isn't our going after Bin Laden and Al Quaida an infringement on Muslims religios freedom?

      No, not at all. OBL isn't in trouble for being a religious whacko, he's in trouble for instigating the murder of several thousand innocent people.

      It doesn't matter whether he did it because he actually believes any of the tripe he spews to his cannon-fodder, or if he did it just for the financial gains from shorting airline stocks. We need him dead, simply because he deserves it.

      The point is that when we remove God from our society we remove the need for morals, because a moral code is basically what religion is, and what God represents to many people, therefore government can impose no morals on anyone, this means that there can be no laws at all, because laws are just an enforcement of morals.

      Your assertion that morality can only be supported by appeal to superstition is patently ridiculous. I don't have to believe in your creation myth to know that killing people is unacceptable.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    3. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by DragonMagic · · Score: 2

      Actually you just sparked something in my mind. Isn't our going after Bin Laden and Al Quaida an infringement on Muslims religios freedom? After all in their eyes we are the great satan, and all they are doing is trying to rid the world of evil. Who is to say what is evil and what is not? With a phrase like one nation under God as a basis for our nations foundation I think we have a very good ground to stand on for retaliating against them, but when you remove God completely from our culture you eliminate any ground we have to stand on.

      Okay, this is really really absurd. We never started going after bin Laden (hell, we gave the Taliban guns to fight the Russians after all!), until he started attacking OUR citizens.

      Religious freedom is allowed, but with that, the freedom is only alloted so long as it causes no public or social harm. You cannot claim religious freedom when you make a human sacrifice; it's still murder. You cannot claim religious freedom when torturing a pig for three days, then setting him on fire; it's still animal cruelty. And for that, you cannot blow up our embassies, our ships, and torture and kill our citizens, and you cannot hijack and fly our planes into our own buildings, and claim religious freedoms.

      I don't like "In God We Trust" on our money, but it's only money. I do not feel that God should be forced as part of our Oaths, especially if the preson being sworn has no belief in God, or any monotheistic beliefs at all. I also don't believe that children should be forced to recite, or even be part of and in group with, any public school or government sanctioned religious context.

      If you think that "one nation under God" is nothing, then perhaps we should be teaching Creationism in history class, and stop teaching evolution in biology? Where is the line really drawn, without just saying no religious impressions in public schools?

      --

      Human nature is the same everywhere; the modes only are different. -- Earl of Chesterfield
    4. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Large+Green+Mallard · · Score: 1

      Curiously, Allah that muslim's worship is the same god that christians/catholics worship. Not just metaphorically, but the Koran mentions Jesus, Moses and Noah by name. Islam however is based on the word of God/Allah as interpretted by Mohammed, and he is regarded as the infallible final prophet, and no-discussion-will-be-entered-into-on-the-subject- thankyouverymuch.

      So if the pledge of allegiance does say "one nation under god", the god it's reffering to is the same one for christians and muslims. However, remember that freedom of religion also means freedom from religion. And zoastrian pagans might have a problem with pledging alliance to god in any way shape or form :)

    5. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      A stupid, gullible, weak feable minded person

      Dammit, you took the reply right out of my mouth.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    6. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by roystgnr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The point is that when we remove God from our society we remove the need for morals,

      Obviously we don't; else the millions of athiests in this country would be raping and pillaging as we speak. The need for morals derives from the fact that ethical behavior is required for us to survive as a society. God can be an incentive toward promoting such behavior, but is not a requirement for defining it or the only possible motivation for enforcing it.

      because a moral code is basically what religion is, and what God represents to many people,

      Exactly the problem. To too many people, God is the only definition of morality, which precludes any morality being "above God". If God orders you to kill your son Isaac or to slaughter everything that breathes in a Canaanite city, no morality can stand in the way of the murder or genocide, because all morality comes from God. In such a state, the only way to be sure that Bin Laden is really doing wrong is to have faith that God wouldn't give such orders to him without checking in with us first.

    7. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by T3kno · · Score: 2

      I have only one question to your argument. If there is no God, and we are free to practice any or no religion we want who sets up the rules for us to live by? Who says murder is murder? I for one believe that abortion is murder. Muslims do NOT believe that 9/11 was murder, so who is right? Who is wrong? Without a set of morals based on something you have absolutely no basis to answer. And I can refute any basis you have for morals as long as my "religion" prohibits me from doing that. I should also be able to practice anything I want because you have removed the basis for our society's morals.

      --
      (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
    8. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Without a set of morals based on something you have absolutely no basis to answer.

      And your set of morals based on a belief of an imaginary friend that loves everyone is better?

      Our laws are based on preservation of an orderly society, logic, and benefit to the ruling class.

      It's similar to the bible, which was based on a set of rules that the ruling class thought would be most beneficial to them, and an orderly society, about 2000 years ago.

      The superstition and invisible people and fire and brimstone were just thrown in to scare people into compliance. The bible is one of the largest and one of the oldest collection of FUD ever. You don't think people knew about the power of fear, uncertainty, and doubt 2000 years ago?

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    9. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by nat5an · · Score: 1

      Mohammad's "infallibility" (whatever that really means) is a question of dispute among the various factions of Islam. However, as a Muslim, I can say that the "under God" in the pledge always bothered me. It's not right. If people want to believe in God, fine, but coercion doesn't make believers out of anyone. So, just in case anyone cares, there's at least one Muslim who's bothered by it!

      --
      Head down, go to sleep to the rhythm of the war drums...
    10. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by bitrott · · Score: 1

      Amen ;) I'm sick of being called 'unprincipled' and 'of weak morals' simply because of my agnostic, leaning-to athiest beliefs. I want to be called those things because I'm an evil, obnoxious bastard. Really though people, let's keep supersition in the horror genre where it belongs. It makes for far better entertainment than it does a basis for life.

    11. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by jdawson · · Score: 1

      Line up people from ten different religions. Then we can say that, statistically speaking, at *least* 90% of their religions are wrong. So if morality must descend from religion, how do we know which one?

      Further, let's say that we know which "religion" is the right one. Let's say it's "Christianity," based on "The Bible." Whose Christianity -- the Baptists, the Catholics, the Jehovah's Witnesses? Whose Bible? The Protestant King James Bible, a Catholic bible with the Apocrypha? A Mormom Bible with the Book of Mormon at the end? A Christian Science book, with the revelations of Mary Baker Eddy? What about auxiliary writings, like Papal Encyclicals, or the Catechism?

      So let's say then that we have picked a particular set of holy writings, interpreted and translated in a language you can read; the Protestant King James Bible, perhaps. How do you interpret what it says and decide how you should live your life? People have been devoting their entire lives to studying this stuff for either hundreds (or thousands, depending how broadly you define "this stuff") of years, and there is still no consensus on lots of major issues. Jusficiation by Faith, or by Works, for starters.

      So if your model of morality is that it has been divinely revealed to us, and we just need to follow its simple instructions, then I think you are on shaky ground, indeed.

      I certainly don't have all the answers, but I think you're better off, morality-wise, starting off with "Do Unto Others As You Would Have Them Do Unto You" and proceeding from there as best you can than you are by deciding that no human-derived morality is better than any other, so you'll take your chances that your particular religion is the right one, send checks when they ask, and keep your mouth closed.

      P.S. -- Yes, I know the correct answer is "The Mormons"; I saw that episode of South Park. :-)

    12. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by NM156 · · Score: 1

      If there is no God, and we are free to practice any or no religion we want who sets up the rules for us to live by?

      I usually stay out of these types of debates, but the above statement is one of the most ignorant statements I've read in the thread. It's the same old ignorant Christian view that somehow religion equates to morality. (tell that to the victims of sexual abuse by catholic priests...) I'm sorry to inform you, but there are many people in this world, who have extremely high moral fiber, yet they don't practice any religion. Morality has absolutely nothing to do with faith, though some religions include moral teachings in their doctrine.

      You ask 'who says murder is murder'. That's a very easy question to answer... when one human being deliberately kills another human being. It's a murder. Whether it's justified or not may be the debated question, but in the end, it's still a murder.

      If you don't know where morality comes from, than I would suggest you grew up in a very disfunctional environment, and I feel very sorry for you.

    13. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Your assertion that morality can only be supported by appeal to superstition is patently ridiculous. I don't have to believe in your creation myth to know that killing people is unacceptable.

      If you believe every human being is given life by a divine Creator and He has said that murder is wrong, then you MUST believe that murder is wrong.

      If you believe that humans evolved from the same ancestor as chimpanzees, and will later evolve into a new and improved species, and the only real difference between a human and another animal is that we happen to be generally in control of things at the moment, then you MAY believe that murder is wrong. You MAY believe that killing cows and pigs is wrong too, or you may like eating beef and pork. Generally most people agree that murdering humans is wrong, slaughtering pigs is OK, mistreating animals is wrong... If you think about it, it's not really set in stone, is it?

      "For instance, on the planet Earth, man had always assumed that he was more intelligent than dolphins because he had achieved so much - the wheel, New York, wars and so on - while all the dolphins had ever done was muck about in the water having a good time. But conversely, the dolphins had always believed that they were far more intelligent than man - for precisely the same reason." - Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    14. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by T3kno · · Score: 2

      I know absolutely where morality comes from. I also know that there is only one single solitary person who was ever moral in the entire history of the earth. Let me ask you, since I assume that you believe that we evolved from a lower species, if you do not believe this please accept my appology for this assumption, but for the sake of argument let's just assume. Do animals practice morialty? Where in the theory of survival of the fittest does morality come into play? You have to have a basis for morality somewhere, is it just human enlightenment that led us to of course killing another is wrong? I would really like to know what the answer to that question is in your mind. There is a massive rift between humans and every other species on this planet that no amount of evolution can account for. If you dont believe in God, you have to belive that we are an animal, and I as an animal do not subscribe to the beliefe that killing another is somehow bad. Please provide an argument that gives me a basis for your morals, other than God.

      --
      (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
    15. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by aebrain · · Score: 2
      Muslims do NOT believe that 9/11 was murder, so who is right?

      Sorry, can't let that one pass. Some Muslims believe that 9/11 was a righteous act. But then again, some Christians believe that those advocating abortion should be slain. The majority - however much they may disaprove of US Culture / Abortion respectively - see 9/11 and the shooting of Abortion advocates as murder most foul. Different in scale, but not in kind.

      Try reading the Koran before saying things like this. OK, Troll fed, move along...

      --
      Zoe Brain - Rocket Scientist
    16. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by scotch · · Score: 2
      Two choices:

      1. Choose an arbitrary system of morals to live by (relative ethics)
      2. Choose a religion that defines a system of absolute morals to live by. By the way, all possible choices of religions are valid (relative ethics)
      Religion provides no safety from the sheer terror that we don't konw the fuck what we're doing.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    17. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Your assertion that morality can only be supported by appeal to superstition is patently ridiculous. I don't have to believe in your creation myth to know that killing people is unacceptable.

      Word. My father seems to think that religion is necessary for morality as well. I try to tell him you can have one without the other, and one doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the other, but he never agrees. Of course, given that there are a whole bunch of religions that disagree with one another on several very important points, there is just no way to say that religion is the answer -- Especially when religions contradict themselves.

      Organized religion is not, repeat not a moral code. Sure, sometimes they try to sell you a moral code, but they will assert that (of course) there is a higher power, and (naturally) there are some people directly in touch with them, therefore you should listen to what these people have to say to you (Q.E.D.) This is naturally a bunch of poppycock. If God is everywhere, and God is listening to you, then you don't need a church to tell you shit. This is what Jesus preached, assuming of course that you see him as a historical figure. I don't see any reason to assume he didn't exist.

      Most of the great religions are founded upon words of love, tolerance, and respect. Then these religious beliefs are used to excuse all kinds of terrible things. If you believe in God, and you believe that the bible is the word of God, you're a sucker -- That thing's been edited so many times it makes the OED look static. But furthermore, you cannot say that it excuses violence on anyone's part other than God's; he's the man with the plan and the golden gun. You are a peon, and you toe the line or you get struck down with the rest of the heathens and unbelievers and so on.

      Let's face it, the reason people say the pledge of Allegiance in school is because of government, not God. You say "under god" because it's part of the pledge of allegiance. I agree that it's wrong to say it, because while truth is one, paths are many, and your path to truth might lead through God, but mine sure doesn't. Luckily, I am able to think for myself, and I even managed to go through a christian day camp for several years without being indoctrinated into a cult of people who believe that angels came down from heaven and rolled a rock away from a cave so they could take the empty shell which once contained the lift of Jesus of Nazareth up to heaven. What do you need a body for up there anyway?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    18. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      The way I usually respond to this idea (that without God, we have no morals) is to say:

      "Well, atheists don't believe in God, yet they have morals and ethics. So what you're saying is, the only thing keeping Christians from pillaging and raping and murdering is their belief in God? That you're so debased, only fear of eternal damnation keeps you from killing people?"

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    19. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by tshak · · Score: 2

      Your assertion that morality can only be supported by appeal to superstition is patently ridiculous. I don't have to believe in your creation myth to know that killing people is unacceptable.

      Whethor or not one is an atheist, monotheist, panantheist, etc. is irrespective of the fact that morality, from a scientific standpoint, does not exist. You mock "superstition" but the concept of morality is no different then a Jew's concept of the "holy land". Jew's believe such things based on historical and cultural teachings, which is how most people reconcile the concepts of morality, and what is "right" or "wrong" (if there is such a thing).

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    20. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by fougasse · · Score: 1
      is it just human enlightenment that led us to of course killing another is wrong?

      Yes. Quite simple, really.

    21. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      I'm sick of being called 'unprincipled' and 'of weak morals' simply because of my agnostic, leaning-to athiest beliefs.

      That's funny, I've been an agnostic, leaning slightly towards atheism, my whole life, and I've never been called 'unprinicpled' or 'of weak morals,' or anything of that sort.

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    22. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by KILNA · · Score: 2

      Just because one is atheistic, doesn't mean one's sense of kinship and compassion for his fellow man goes away. Atheism is not a lack of feeling, it is the belief that divinity is incredulous. Your argument is fallacious, and you should be killed like the dog you are.

      --
      Error: PANTS NOT FOUND. Press <F1> to continue.
    23. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      You make the parent's point very well. You say that OBL should die, but the only reasons you manage to muster are "simply because he deserves it" and "killing people is unacceptable." I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you have some stronger reasoning than that. So I'll ask: Where is your basis for morality? How do you know that killing people is a deed that should be punished?

    24. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

      Put simply, a modern society cannot operate without laws and a way to enforce them. I am an atheist yet I do more for the good of society than many religious people.

    25. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by BlueBlade · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Morality IS logical. I'm sorry. Morality as in "set of rules on how to behave so that the maximum number of people can have the maximum level of hapiness". That's the ideal society in which everyone would like to live in, where everybody is perfectly happy. But of course, it can never be reached.

      So yes, using this goal as a start, we can define a general "morality". And it will be logical, it doesn't need to involve any kind of God or religion. The problem actually comes WHEN religion is involved somehow, because the various beliefs are often quirky and illogical, so they introduce sets of rules that have nothing to do with increasing the population's general well-being.

      We can very logically conclude that, for example, murder is wrong. If you allow anyone to kill anyone else, obviously this rule will also apply to you too (risk of getting killed by anyone). No one wants their lives to be endangered this way, so for the general well-being of the population, murder should not be allowed. It's that simple.

      --
      Religion is the best example of mass psychosis
    26. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Why is killing people unacceptable? Your foolish law restricting my freedom to remove simple obstacles is so unconstitutional. I find that murder law very limiting to my freedoms.

    27. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      What credit should I give when I quote you on this? I've been trying to put that into words for a few years now, and you just handed them to me on a silver platter. Thanks!

    28. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Trinition · · Score: 2

      ...most people reconcile the concepts of morality, and what is "right" or "wrong"

      I submit that "morality" is the concept of doing what is good, or even 'not bad', for a society. A society in which things that are bad for the society are prevalent won't be around long.

      How many societes do you know of wheremurder is ok, or, in fact, encouraged, between members of that society? I don't thing would be around long enough o put a dent in the historical record before every member wa dead.

      Morality isn't some intelligent creation of a God. Its simply a side effect of our species' evolution. It so happens we are more "fit" to survive as members of a society, so any members who are anti-social, and thus didn't form a society, were less it. The result is a society, which by nature of it coming into existence, is moral.

      Sure, there's deviots who murder, rape, etc. But its not the norm. Its just noise in the signal.

    29. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      Not directly, but whenever I discuss religion with theists (especially Christians), we get the impression that that's what they think.

    30. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Rational thought demands that killing other humans be "wrong" in general, completely independent of the mystical value of God's Kiss.

      Like all other organisms, mankind's principle goal is to assure its continued existence. Terminating the existence of a fellow human decreases the net likelihood of our species surviving the next 10,000 years by the sum population of its potential offspring. Therefore, making dead humans is "bad".

      The other examples you cite are largely emotional. Making dead cows is defensible if it results in live humans. Not making dead pigs is defensible if it results in fewer humans getting trichina worms.

    31. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by lakeland · · Score: 1
      The easiest way of seeing if this is true or just propoganda to justify your actions is to try substituing names and see if it still holds. Let's try that here:

      OBL isn't in trouble for being a religious whacko, he's in trouble for instigating the murder of several thousand innocent people.

      George Bush isn't in trouble for being a religious whacko, he's in trouble for instigating the murder of several thousand innocent people.(Think of the thousands of dead muslims civilians that were drafted against the American invasion of Afganastan.)

      It doesn't matter whether he did it because he actually believes any of the tripe he spews to his cannon-fodder, or if he did it just for the financial gains from increasing arms sales. We need him dead, simply because he deserves it.

      Well, to avoid being labelled a troll, judge for yourself.

    32. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Architect · · Score: 1

      This happens to be the same God that murders 40 children for making fun of a bald prophet? Who orders raped women to be killed if they do not yell out loud enough? Who cannot simply "forgive" but has to crucify someone and then "forgive?????"

      Where did that God get morallity from? What would be his basis?

      Gee, are rights and freedoms moral? Where in the bible are those mentioned????? When did Christ ever say "all people are born equal?" If I remember, the bible says in effect that all people are born deserving of death.

      Some morallity....

    33. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      "a modern society cannot operate without laws and a way to enforce them."

      I would agree with this. However, the question still remains, how do we know this is a good thing? Why do we even want a modern society to operate? Simply because it's fun? Because we feel good about it?

      And where do we get our laws from? Simply what works? What happens, then, when what works in someone's favor works to the detriment of another? How do we ajudicate the conflict?

    34. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by debrain · · Score: 2

      You have said that it is *sufficient* that morality comes from belief in a divine Creator. Certainly you did not say it was *necessary* to believe in a Creator for morality, because that is as noted elsewhere "patently absurd".

      However, you might note that humans murder in the name of their colloquial deity more oft than any other reason. Certainly we mistreat our animals in the name of capitalism, and certainly slaughtering pigs is prevented in Jewish cultures because of an arbitrary stigma.

      Are these arbitrary stigmas, overwhelmingly selfish motivations, and immoral justifications not the direct result of blind faith in a divine Creator establishment?

      Does that clarify by interjecting thought, or did I completely miss your point? ;)

      The most anthropophobic and justifably moral of religions, in my humble but correct opinion, Buddhism, makes a joke of the divine Creator, and rightly so - it has always been a desire of the Buddhist to answer what one can, live with what one cannot answer, and to know the difference. The divine Creator notion, then, certainly is not intrinsic morality - belief in such a beast is more a source of death and abuse and immorality than a moderator; at best they are independent variables in the morality equation.

    35. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2
      Two choices

      No , there aren't.

    36. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2
      I also know that there is only one single solitary person who was ever moral in the entire history of the earth.

      How do you know this? ("Because I read in a book somewhere that Peter said so" is not a valid answer.)

    37. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because your athiest does not mean that you must be sub-human, he was just arguing a logical point.

      By believing in the absence of religion, you have no reason to believe we have a innate law against killing humans, this was the reason I believe religions were formed in the first place.

    38. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by scotch · · Score: 2

      Yeah, really, there is just one choice, at least that was my intended point (see parens at end of original).

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    39. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I'm not mistaken several species of lizard murder the male during procreation.

    40. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Eugene+O'Neil · · Score: 1

      If you believe every human being is given life by a divine Creator and He has said that murder is wrong, then you MUST believe that murder is wrong.

      Yes, and if you believe that you were given life by a divine Creator and He put you on this earth to slay infidels and unbelievers, then you MUST believe that killing is GOOD.

      Some of the most horrifying events in the history of mankind were directly caused by religeon. Athiests tend not to indulge in the sort of cold-blooded acts of mass brutality that can be inspired by those chilling words, "God told me to do it."

    41. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by bmj · · Score: 1

      no doubt this has been repeated before, but religion in one form or another really is necessary for *morality.* if you don't believe that life originated from something sacred, why is it really worth anything? one of the tenets of evolutionary theory is, of course, *survival of the fittest.* if this is the case, shouldn't we all do what we can to get ahead? if all that really matters is me, myself, and i, why should i care about someone else's conception of morality or ethics?

      Most of the great religions are founded upon words of love, tolerance, and respect. Then these religious beliefs are used to excuse all kinds of terrible things. If you believe in God, and you believe that the bible is the word of God, you're a sucker -- That thing's been edited so many times it makes the OED look static. But furthermore, you cannot say that it excuses violence on anyone's part other than God's; he's the man with the plan and the golden gun. You are a peon, and you toe the line or you get struck down with the rest of the heathens and unbelievers and so on.

      sadly, you're right. too bad if you _really_ read what jesus said, it would be pretty hard to imply such behavior. christians all too often make christians look bad.

      imho, as a christian, i strongly believe in the separation of church and state. i do not want a theocracy, or even anything vaguely resembling it. *render unto ceasar what is ceasar's* sticks in my mind. take the *under god* out of the pledge, take *in god we trust* off our currency. don't allow our elected officials to mention god. you won't hear me complaining.

      --
      Whereof we cannot speak, thereof we must be silent. --Ludwig Wittgenstein
    42. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      Morality as in "set of rules on how to behave so that the maximum number of people can have the maximum level of hapiness"

      This isn't morality though. Under that system, a minority (homosexuals, jews, irish, whatever) could be persecuted, and as long as the majority were happy with it, it would then be "moral" under that system. I seem to remember writing about these sorts of systems being proposed and shot down in my philosophy classes years back.

    43. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by DietFluffy · · Score: 1
      He is referring to Utilitarianism. Classic Utilitarianism, the theory defended by Bentham and Mill, can be summarized in three propositions.

      First, actions are to be judged right or wrong solely by virtue of their consequences. Nothing else matters. Right actions are, simply, those that have the best consequences.

      Second, in assesing consequences, the only thing that matters is the amount of happiness or unhappiness that is caused. Everything else is irrelevant. Thus right actions are those than produce the greatest balance of happiness over unhappiness.

      Third, in calculating the happiness or unhappiness that will be caused, no one's happiness is to be counted as more important than anyone else's. Each person's welfare is equally important.

      Thus, right actions are those that produce the greatest possible balance of happiness over unhappiness, with each person's happiness counted as equally important.

      Please note that is one of several moral theories, and it does have it's flaws. No single theory is perfect. Finding a perfect moral theory would be equivalent to finding a Unified Theory of Physics; it's even possible that neither exists. You can read all about it in James Rachel's, The Elements of Moral Philosophy.

    44. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by eddeye · · Score: 1

      >because laws are just an enforcement of morals.

      Right. We all remember the 9th commandmant: Thou shalt not jaywalk.

      --
      Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch.
    45. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by LordNimon · · Score: 1
      no doubt this has been repeated before, but religion in one form or another really is necessary for *morality.* if you don't believe that life originated from something sacred, why is it really worth anything? one of the tenets of evolutionary theory is, of course, *survival of the fittest.* if this is the case, shouldn't we all do what we can to get ahead? if all that really matters is me, myself, and i, why should i care about someone else's conception of morality or ethics?

      I get ahead by sharing my world with others, and allowing them to live with me. I don't need to destroy others for me to get ahead, I can do it on my own merits. I enjoy life more because I can interact and learn from other people.

      I don't think you need religion to have morality. Otherwise, all atheists would be immoral, and we know that's not true. Why can't I simply decide, on my own, that I want to do good things? And why can't life be worth something all by itself? The very fact that I'm alive is worth a great deal to me.

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    46. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by LordNimon · · Score: 1
      Actually, there are at least two. :-)

      I remember reciting the Pledge when I was a young child and the only Muslim in my public school. The phrase "under God" always bothered me. I knew it was wrong, but I was too young to make a big deal of it. Frankly, every time a politician tries to promote something religious in this country, it always feels like it's pro-Christian and anti-everything-else.

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    47. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by UranusReallyHertz · · Score: 1

      Please. Stalin. Mao. Hitler. Mussolini. Pol Pot Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong. Hussein. Hoxha. Ceausescu. All of these were/are not motivated by religion.

      --
      Smoking is an expensive, slow, and unreliable method of suicide.
    48. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      Just re-read your post. It turns out I have nothing against what you said. Sorry.

    49. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by global_diffusion · · Score: 2

      Obviously we don't; else the millions of athiests in this country would be raping and pillaging as we speak.

      Oh fuck! I totally forgot. Be right back!

    50. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Rysc · · Score: 1

      If I believed every human being was given life by a divine creator, and he said that murder was wrong, then I MAY belive that murder is wrong. I may believe that murder is fine, just not what the creator wanted. You assume that "believe in divine creator" is the same as "am a mindless slave to divine creators will". I do not see how one follows the other, and challenge you to prove it.

      This, however, is splitting hairs, and we could go many rounds along such lines. I am agnostic (side note: Athiests as bad as stoned fundamentalists christians) and believe that murdering humans can be wrong, and usually is, due to largely reasoned (if not strictly logical) thinking.

      If I end the life of another human being, I know that I have prevented possibilities. I am, on a fairly detailed level, aware of what that person was capable of, since it's roughly what I am capable of, and I would know that I was stopping that capability from being realized. I no more desire for that to happen then I desire to die. If I die, you see, I *miss what happens next*. What's more, if I kill someone, I miss what might have happened of they had been alive. I hurt myself, and cheat myself and the world out of interesting and possibly world-shattering coolness. Setting aside kinship with fellow man and related rot, which way or may not mean anything, I'd be a lot less happy if this zany world weren't as zany any more.

      Obviously this has limits. If it were a case of self defence, I'd ask myself the question: What's worse, my missing EVERYTHING from this plane of existence by failing to prevent myself from being killed, or miss SOME of it by killing the person intent on so preventing me? My attacker is in this situation doing what is morally wrong (that is, limiting possibilities) and I am right (from my perspective) in killing him, because it sets fewer limits on possibilities. Now, if an attacker were killing someone else the path is not so clear. I would ahve to weigh the interesting possibilities that would result if each were alive, and I'd probably have to assign some degree of desireability ("interest") of those possibilities. Very complicated, very subjective, depends on the situation.

      I'm sureyou get the idea by now. I can, if you so desire, show how various other moral scenarios can be resolved (often in a way compatible with conventional morality) by similar means. This is by no means the only, or even the best, way to resolve moral issues in a religion-neutral way; it is what I do, and what works for me.

      Note that I do not attempt to flame YOU for your choice in method of resolving moral conundrums... even if that way IS by turning to edicts of a false god.

      --
      I want my Cowboyneal
    51. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by tumbaumba · · Score: 1

      Hitler was indeed a religious man.
      It really does not make sense to count who killed more religious or atheists which is just another form of religion.
      Religion is not a key point of human existance, it really is a side effect.

    52. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by jcr · · Score: 2

      If you believe every human being is given life by a divine Creator and He has said that murder is wrong, then you MUST believe that murder is wrong.

      Your tautology above fails to address the fact that religion is frequently used as the premise for murder on a vast scale.

      Generally most people agree that murdering humans is wrong, slaughtering pigs is OK, mistreating animals is wrong... If you think about it, it's not really set in stone, is it?

      Maybe not for you, but your beliefs are not my concern. Your behaviour may become my concern, if you menace an innocent party.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    53. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by jcr · · Score: 2

      You say that OBL should die, but the only reasons you manage to muster are "simply because he deserves it" and "killing people is unacceptable."

      The imperative of killing OBL derives from the right to self-defense. He's killed thousands of innocent people, and there's no reason to believe that he will desist until he's dead.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    54. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Bloody+Pulp · · Score: 1

      I don't believe that your definition of morality is any more or less logical than any other definition of morality, whether it is religious or not.

      The definition of morality that you quote, a "set of rules on how to behave so that the maximum number of people can have the maximum level of hapiness", seems to me, to imply that there is some objective and quantitative measurement of happiness in order to measure the maximum level of happiness. Without such an objective measurement of happiness, you would have to rely on some subjecitve measurement. And if you rely on a subjective measurement, then your definition of morality becomes subjective. It becomes no more logical than a religious definition of morality because it relies on a subjective measurement of happiness.

      Even if you could come up with an objective measurement of "happiness", let's say by measuring the level of endorphins in the brain, then you're really defining your morality using the objective measurement and not "true" happiness. Your definition of morality becomes a "set of rules on how to behave so that the maximum number of people can have the maximum level of endorphins" and not "true" happiness.

      Of course, you can not worry about having a quantitative measurement of happiness and just say people are happy or not happy. In which case, you would re-define your definition of morality as simply as a set of rules on how to behave so that the maximum number of people can have happiness. But, you still have a problem of having an objective way of determining if people are happy or not.

      You are also assuming the population's general well-being is equivalent to your definition morality, i.e. the maximum number of people having the maximum level of hapiness. Your definition of morality is based on the happiness of individuals and does not take into account of the society as a whole. For example, if 51% of the population were made really happy by killing the other 49% of the population then by your definition of morality, this would be morally "right" as long as there was enough happiness. This could continue until almost the entire population was killed off, assuming there was enough happiness. However, I don't think that it is hardly good for the population's general well-being to have almost the entire population killed off.

      The definition of morality, "set of rules on how to behave so that the maximum number of people can have the maximum level of hapiness", is dependent on what makes an individual happy and several assumptions. It assumes happiness can somehow determined objectively. It assumes a population with a maximum amount of happiness in its individuals is what's best for the population's general well-being as a whole.

      Morality is about what is "wrong" and "right" behaviour. Whether you use a religious morality or some other philisophical moral theory to make that determination, you must use assumptions in deciding what is moral. Certain moral theories may seem more logical than others but in the end, in really comes down to a matter of personal choice.

    55. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by KILNA · · Score: 2

      It was all just a set-up for one of my usual petty attempts at ironic humor, but I'll take your bait anyway. Firstly, religion is the natural result of not having a good process for understanding the material world. Without the scientific method, you are left with no clear framework for disproving supernatural claims. Humans, left to their own devices, will make up stories vice leave something unexplained... story telling is in our basic nature.

      Regardless, the origins of religion are not principal to my point: my assertion is that atheism does not preclude morality. I am moral simply because I think I can live a fuller life in the here and now, not because I'm having my eternal afterlife dangled before me as a prize or punishment.

      Human society is based on the premise that we can all have more fulfilling lives if, in general, we follow the "Golden Rule"... that there are rewards for treating one another as we would like to be treated. The desire to help your fellow man does not require supernatural beliefs, and I stick by my assertion that his argument is fallacious.

      --
      Error: PANTS NOT FOUND. Press <F1> to continue.
    56. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by mpe · · Score: 2

      The imperative of killing OBL derives from the right to self-defense. He's killed thousands of innocent people, and there's no reason to believe that he will desist until he's dead.

      I doubt he personally has killed thousands of people. Even if he has given the orders. then why should, the likes of, G W Bush and Ariel Sharon not be placed in exactly the same catagory?

    57. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by KILNA · · Score: 2

      I struggle to find the link, I think it was at http://www.infidels.org, but Atheists are significantly under-represented in prisons as compared to their ratio to the general population. This would seem to indicate that, at least by legal definitions of right and wrong, atheists are more moral than theists. Disclaimer: I do not think the law accurately represents all definitions of what is moral, my own included.

      --
      Error: PANTS NOT FOUND. Press <F1> to continue.
    58. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 2

      Science is the search for truth.

      Religion is the belief that you have the truth.

      Law is the enforcement of what you believe to be the truth onto other people.

      ...

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    59. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by jakew · · Score: 1

      Hang on, a minority of Muslims may not believe that 9/11 was murder, but it is a grossly inaccurate generalisation to claim that all do not.

    60. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure others will reply to the main points of your post, so just let me point out your faulty logic.
      I believe in a divine Creator, and if She had said 'X', then I do not, necessarily, believe 'X'.

    61. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by mpe · · Score: 2

      Curiously, Allah that muslim's worship is the same god that christians/catholics worship.

      Interesting seperation of christian and catholic... Jews, Christians and Muslims all supposedly worship the same god.

      Not just metaphorically, but the Koran mentions Jesus, Moses and Noah by name. Islam however is based on the word of God/Allah as interpretted by Mohammed, and he is regarded as the infallible final prophet, and no-discussion-will-be-entered-into-on-the-subject- thankyouverymuch.

      Islam has different sects, just as does Christianity and Jewdism.

    62. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The entire concept that killing is wrong was brought into culture through religion. The poster you responded to was entirely correct. You remove God, you remove morality. Take a look at what has happened to the country already as people move futher from religion (of any sort): Murder is up, robbery, rape, CEOs fleecing people, sexual perversion (and I don't mean just adultry, I mean really sick crap that's touted as normal).


      People cannot in modern society proclaim to have morals, lest they be branded as "intolerant" by the "enlightened masses" (who are meanwhile killing, raping, and robbing the hell out of each other, or at least endorsing it by being so soft-handed with the perpetrators).



      I'm not tolerant of where the society is headed. I for one don't want to see the country go further down the toilet than it already is.

    63. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by muffel · · Score: 1
      The most anthropophobic and justifably moral of religions, in my humble but correct opinion, Buddhism,...
      A Freudian typo or did you actually mean antropophobic? (Or maybe a pun I don't get?).
      Good points you make, by the way.
      --

      bla
    64. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The basis of humanist morality is very simple, "Do unto others as you would have then do unto you".

      Murder is wrong - immoral - for me, because I don't think it is right for someone else to murder me.

      You can make more complex arguments, but all the ones I have seen boil down to this idea - treat everyone as you would treat yourself in their position.

      -S

    65. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by bulfinch · · Score: 1

      That's utilitarianism.
      It's no more correct (in an ultimate sense) than a moral system handed down by a deity, but I'm basically for it, if it's refined a bit of course.

    66. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Hard_Code · · Score: 3, Interesting
      my assertion is that atheism does not preclude morality. I am moral simply because I think I can live a fuller life in the here and now, not because I'm having my eternal afterlife dangled before me as a prize or punishment

      EXACTLY. In fact, I find that people who are dogmatically religious to be LESS MORAL. Because they are guaranteed that if they follow a few rules set in stone that no matter what they do they will be righteous and will be rewarded in heaven. To that effect, religion removes human conscience. Now, if you are a Hobbesian, and think that humans in the "natural state" are some awful, dispicable creates who just randomly murder and commit atrocities against each other for no reason, I guess I can see why you feel in need to write down some "absolute rules" that people follow. I happen not to think that (and I believe science, as well as the history of many indigenous peoples and civilizations prove), but instead that on balance humans are generally "good" (if we were not "good", we'd just end up killing each other and we'd be extinct). If humans are generally good, the effect of religion (well, "religion" can be interpreted broady, let's say "organized religions with fixed absolute moral system"), is to erase human conscience, and replace it with some arbitrary absolute rules. If your religion has the misfortune of decreeing that it is the only "true" religion, you have instant strife because now it is your "duty" to convert the unwashed masses. Enter most crimes against humanity.

      On the other hand, although an atheist *may* be amoral, in fact, an atheist is probably MORE moral, because an atheist has to consciously determine, manage and control their own set of values and morals and interactions with other human beings. They take responsibility. They can't defer to some "god" which says it is just naturally OK to do this but not that. In fact, I think short of one religion "winning" and converting the entire population, we will have to rely on humanism, our consciences, and rational thought. We will do a great disservice to humanity (and everything else involved, e.g. the environment) if we refuse to take responsibility for our own actions.

      And if you don't like this post, well, it's not my fault, God made me do it (or was it the Devil? They are so similar, I always forget).
      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    67. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      The imperative of killing OBL derives from the right to self-defense. He's killed thousands of innocent people, and there's no reason to believe that he will desist until he's dead.

      I think I agree with you. That leaves the question, though, where does the right to self-defense derive from?

    68. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Snaller · · Score: 2

      >We need him dead, simply because he deserves it.

      That's what bin laden says about you.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    69. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Clanner · · Score: 1

      "The rules for us to live by" that you mention are a constantly evolving set of "rules" (call them Laws, if you like) that society as a whole has adopted in order to help the society survive.
      For example, if murder were not "against the rules", society as a whole would be forced to waste many resources in protecting itself from every other member of society. Generally not an efficient way to run things. If you're constantly worried that any citizen may come along and kill you for any reason, you'll be pretty busy attending to your defenses.
      Don't forget, these rules are constanly changing! It used to be legal to indulge in cocaine use. Now it's not. Did some "God" suddenly have an inspiration and decide that coke use was Bad? No. Society saw the ill effects and changed it's rule accordingly.

      As for your comment on Muslims beliefs about 9/11, I think you're overly generalizing. Muslim fundamentalists who believe that the West is corrupting the world may believe that what happened on 09/11 was not mudrer, but plenty of other Muslims agree with us, that it was a crime. When you start lumping all people of a particular faith together, you start down a very slippery slope- "They're different from us- they MUST be bad!"

      This ruling has no impact on your ability to practice whatever faith you choose to believe in. It only restricts the US Government from sponsoring one religion or set of religious beliefs above another. No where does it say that you can't continue to recite the Pledge Of Allegiance in it's current form. It only says that the US Government cannot mandate the words "under God" be included. You can change it to say anything you want- that is your right in this country.

      I don't know, it just seems to me that many people just can't grasp the concept of other people having different beliefs. Those other people must be wrong, or bad, or terrorists, or something else. Believe what you want, but also let me believe what I want. Is that so hard to understand?

      --
      The dry fish swims alone.
    70. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by T3kno · · Score: 2

      Show me one then. If there was one in history, surely there is one alive now. There are more people living now than have ever lived before, so show me one.

      --
      (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
    71. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by phatStrat · · Score: 1

      I don't have to believe in your creation myth to know that killing people is unacceptable.

      This is becoming off topic, and I normally don't respond to these types comments, and although I don't consider the above comment flamebait, I'd still like to know:

      Why do you think killing people is unacceptable and how do you know that you are right?

      The statement itself that everything is relative is an absolute statement and is therefore self defeating. I'd say thinking that killing is wrong apart from morals is self-centered and usually boils down to greed of some sort. Otherwise what does it matter what you think is right or wrong?

    72. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by tshak · · Score: 2

      What you are explaining is a social effort to enforce a set of guidlines or laws to maximize the happiness of the people. This is not morality though. The entire concept of "what's moral is what makes you happy" is a complete human fabrication. I'm not saying that we need some kind of religion - that's not my point. I agree that the concept of morality makes sense logically, but that doesn't prove it's existance by any means. You can not prove anything by logic alone.

      We can very logically conclude that, for example, murder is wrong.

      What is murder? Who defines it? Should we kill bin Laden? Is that murder? If you take a world vote are you confident that the majority would rule that killing bin Laden is not murder (or "morally wrong")? And are you prepared to live your life and define what's "morally right" based on everyone elses opinion? There was a time not too long ago in history where the majority was catholic, and you would get persecuted if you had any sexual relations with anyone outside of marraige. I'm sorry, but I do not want the "majority" defining what's "morally right" for me.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    73. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that genious of a quote.

    74. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by jcr · · Score: 2

      That leaves the question, though, where does the right to self-defense derive from?

      Derive it from wherever you care to.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    75. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by bitrott · · Score: 1

      I've been told it to my face, by 'well meaning', 'moderate' Christians, who can't understand or cope with a world where people get along just fine without religion, God or such. they assume that 'deep down inside' we're really struggling with issues of religious import, and that we're all actually 'lost' souls, groping in the darkness for an answer. Well, aren't we all? Some of us just aren't so lazy as give up and settle for one answer (atheism) or another (organized religion). Active, vital, imaginative minds are always on the look out for percieved flaws in 'truth', and ready to fight for the empirical, rational man.

    76. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by debrain · · Score: 2

      I did mean anthropophobic. I didn't mean to coin the word, so much as express the idea: importance in things other than humans. In the Buddhist case it is more extreme: I may believe it to be almost a reverent nihilsim of things "human".

      Thanks for the compliment & cheers

    77. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Surt · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://www.xenodochy.org/ex/lists/moraldev.html

      People who don't understand how to reach morality without codification by religion should be introduced to kohlberg's stages of moral development.

      It is usually a good shock to the system for religious addicts to find themselves (most of them anyway) very logically ranked at 4 of 6 (or 5 of 7 depending on which reading you find) while athiests (again most, not all) are ranked one or two levels higher.

      The sad thing is that without better education for the masses, religion has in fact gotten a lot of people to level 4 who otherwise might be stuck at an even lower level, and be a greater danger to the rest of us.

      The best solution to our current problem with widespread religious mass murder (IMO) is education.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    78. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Large+Green+Mallard · · Score: 1

      Uh yeah, I'd just woken up :)

    79. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Large+Green+Mallard · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I'm Anglican (if anything), which is an offshoot of the Church of England. And for the love of go... erm.. everything, I wish that seperation of church and state actually happened. In God We Trust is not appropriate for your money either..

      So what if your country's godless? most of societies problems are caused by blind obediance to faith. Teen pregnancys, street preachers.. etc :)

    80. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Annoying · · Score: 1

      Here is the angle I use for morality. Not fearing reprecussions in an afterlife theres only 2 things left to keep me moral, legal reasons and my own opinions on morality. If for some reason I were completely exempt from laws (diplomatic immunity maybe) I still wouldn't commit crimes for. Why? It's something called the tragedy of commons. If you haven't heard of it then it is explained something like this. A community shares a parcel of land as a common green, and say 10 ranchers put 10 cattle each out onto a field capable of supporting 100 cattle. Then one gets the brilliant idea, I put out 11 cows, each of my cows is a tiny bit thinner but I get a whole extra cow. Then the next day every farmer has a few extra cows, and they overgraze and the village starves come winter since all the cows died of starvation. This can be applied to theft very effectively. I steal, gain a lot personally but hurt everyone a little in general. By a diminished feeling of safety, trust, and assuming the neighborhood was nice enough to donate some to the victim monetarily. This doesn't immediately harm myself, but tomorrow night when someone else follows the example I could be the next victim. So for each person that doesn't commit a crime they are making another individual signifigantly better off as well as making the world a little bit better for everyone including themself.

      To summarize, by not commiting a crime even if there were no directly consequencial reasons not to. I make the world a better place, even if it's completely immeasurably insignifigantly better. And I count on others to do the same as individuals, which in the end makes the world tolerable. I can't myself limit everyone to 10 cows but all the ranchers know that if they want cows come winter they can only put so many on the field, and frown unhappily at the ranchers who put on too many.

      So there is a view of morality and reasoning to use it that doesn't require religious beliefs.

    81. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      There is a massive rift between humans and every other species on this planet that no amount of evolution can account for.

      We have enough fossils to have a pretty good idea of the transition from a common ancestor with the apes, to modern humans.

      -asb

    82. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Some+Woman · · Score: 1

      I think that BlueBlade's definition of morality should be viewed in the context of treating all people the same. I.E: what single behavior set could you have, which, when applied to all human beings, results in the greatest amount of happiness for the greatest number of people.

      --
      My dingo ate your honor student.
    83. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2
      I'll rephrase: How do you know that there was even one single person who was moral? What is your basis for claiming that there was any such person?

      As a side note, your demand that I "show you one", is akin to a person in 967 CE saying "Human flight is impossible ... Show me a human that can fly if you disagree!" Or, if you prefer a more technical example, it's akin to saying "this cryptographic algorithm is unbreakable because nobody has ever broken it!"

    84. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      Hear hear!

    85. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by T3kno · · Score: 2

      So you're saying that I cannot say that no moral person ever existed because one may exist in the future. I am not saying that one will not exist, I am saying that one never has existed and that one does not currently exist. In 967 CE if I were to say that Human flight was impossible I would be 100% correct. Please think out your arguments before you try to prove what you cannot. One perfect person existed, and he still exists, he is not in human form on this earth now though, he is inside of me, I know him personally and intamately.

      --
      (B) + (D) + (B) + (D) = (K) + (&)
    86. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      roy stogner you suck!!!! WHY dont YOU answer MY email!!!!!!!!!

    87. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by lab16 · · Score: 1

      yes, I agree roy stogner does suck. you sure hit the mark there.

    88. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" by KILNA · · Score: 2

      Perhaps not... you are arguing on the basis that persecution of minorities is based on the happiness of those in power. But persecution is an expression of insecurity, and any pleasure drawn from it is likely to be a cover for dealing with darker emotions. I say that net happiness is not higher under mob rule, and cannot be morally justifiable under the "greater good" definition.

      --
      Error: PANTS NOT FOUND. Press <F1> to continue.
  128. o quit crying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like a little bitch will ya?

  129. Farfetched but very true... by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 3, Flamebait

    I remember when the Euro was in the "design" phase, and Dutch people wondered what was going to happen to the words "God is with us", etched in the rim of the old Guilder coins. Some were upset over losing those words on our currency. (Side note: the Dutch 1 and 2 Euro coins still carry those words, but who cares?).

    Those were fun discussions! Arguments about our multicultural society, and separation of state and church, were all swept aside with counterarguments about cultural heritage and such. But those in favour of those four words would look quite shocked when one would suggest to replace the word God with Allah. Funny how such things work two ways...

    Anyway... is this even worth being upset about? As someone rightly said, the children in school mostly cannot grasp the significance of these words, so them saying "under God" isn't a big deal. If you're not religious, you can deal with saying God, right? If you are religious, will God suddenly smite the US in wrath because the two words are removed? If you are of another persuation, will you go to hell for saying this?

    get a real issue to concern yourself with, people.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    1. Re:Farfetched but very true... by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 2
      Those were fun discussions! Arguments about our multicultural society, and separation of state and church, were all swept aside with counterarguments about cultural heritage and such. But those in favour of those four words would look quite shocked when one would suggest to replace the word God with Allah. Funny how such things work two ways...

      I can kinda understand the conservatives' point of view there, since "Gott Mit Uns!" (sp?) was a Dutch battle-cry for so long during the Middle Ages. It would be like suggesting that the Romans alter "SPQR" to mean something else.

      "In God We Trust" was never an American battle cry, but it does harken in some ways to America's Masonic roots. It may be worth preserving for that reason.

    2. Re:Farfetched but very true... by taniwha · · Score: 1

      As someone rightly said, the children in school mostly cannot grasp the significance of these words, so them saying "under God" isn't a big deal.

      As athiests with children in the US school system we're very aware of all the "god stuff" that's thrown at them - on purpose we chose a primary school that didn't say the pledge so that they wouldn't be exposed to it and made to feel outsiders.

      Kids see stuff in a very black-and-white way - it's hard to deal with this subject in the sensitive way that it needs to be dealt with - the ideas that we want to teach them which boil down to something like "religion is a silly thing that other people care about deeply, it's been the cause of countless war and suffering over the years and the world would be a better place if no one believed in it - HOWEVER it's also a very sensitive topic, people you have to deal with every day, who may be your friends have very deep beliefs and are overly sensitive about them, you have to be very carefull not to offend people you care about no matter how silly you may think their beliefs are"

      Little kids will walk up to strangers on the street and tell them to stop smoking because it's bad for them - they have no social tact - teaching them how to live with the religious is hard. Having the govt. muddy the playing field makes it even harder

      If you're not religious, you can deal with saying God, right?

      well only without the capital "g" after all it's only a false meme

    3. Re:Farfetched but very true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know. I was raised without religeon, and I said the modern pledge every day without a problem. It seems like I was well along in school before I had any idea what religeon was about, and that I wasn't involved in it. It never bothered me.

      Now, as an atheist, I don't have a problem running out into the street and yelling, "Jesus is the Lord!", because I don't believe in anybody that can throw a lightning bolt at me for doing so. I sit quietly through grace at other people's houses. I will even use the context of their religeon when talking to them to help communication. Atheism can be very tolerant.

      Think about it, if a Christian doesn't try to convert you, then they're implicitly allowing you to go to Hell. That's kind of like not warning you that you're about to get run over by a bus. People talk about tolerance, and not inflicting your beliefs on others, but to not do so seems disrespectful to me. But atheists can be tolerant, because the religeous aren't hurting anyone until they start some Jihad.

      Atheism leaves most of those deep existential questions unanswered, and that's hard to deal with. If some people use religeon to fill the hole, then cool. (Actually, I think >>90% of it is just how you're raised, as opposed to choosing your religeon, which invalidates that argument.) I suppose it could be disrespectful in the same sense to let people believe in something untrue, but if it's for their own good, then it's just Santa Claus. I also don't call them "silly" because that's implying that I'm better than them, and I'm not.

      Also, I don't worry about "God" in so many words. I would argue against using Jesus or Allah, because they specify a religeon. God is just a generic term that can be applied to any religeon or lack thereof. I relate it to infinity. It doesn't actually exist, but it's a very useful reference.

      There are a lot of good reasons to seperate church and state, and to argue against pledging to God. However, I wouldn't worry about the kids. Instill your beliefs and values in them (i.e. raise them right in your home), and they'll probably turn out just fine. And most likely they'll be understanding atheists like you.

    4. Re:Farfetched but very true... by Decimal · · Score: 2

      Anyway... is this even worth being upset about? As someone rightly said, the children in school mostly cannot grasp the significance of these words, so them saying "under God" isn't a big deal. If you're not religious, you can deal with saying God, right?

      I in no way am trying to associate the Judeo / Christian diety with the following reference, in fact I'm only using it to make a point, but imagine if those two little words happened to be two different little words:

      "Hail Hitler"

      Do you now see the problem with having impressionable little children recite sayings that they probably don't understand?

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
  130. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It's through the pledge the children start to learn that there are higher principles than simple "me first moral relativism".

    So can you pinpoint where it all goes horribly wrong then?

  131. Fouding Fathers Did Not Force Their Beliefs On Us by GuyMannDude · · Score: 2

    So much for the founding fathers with their Christian beliefs.

    The particular religous beliefs of the founding fathers is irrelevant and they realized this. That is what is so amazing about the country they helped build. Example Numero Uno would have to be Thomas Paine who, as a Deist, wrote The Age Of Reason -- one of the classic books on free thinking.

    GMD

  132. ...go live in another country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No thanks. I'll stay right here and enjoy all the freedoms granted by the Constitution. If you want to legislate what people must believe, then you are the one who belongs in another country. Nazi Germany comes to mind.

    I don't approve of torturing animals, but if you want to torture yourself by marrying five women, well, that's your funeral.

  133. Of course it is, and more. by Byteme · · Score: 1

    It is obvious church/state separation issue.

    Why does a naturalized citizen need to say it once, yet all the children get brainwashed each day?

    Shouldn't Christians and the like be opposed to the pledge also? It seems like a form of idolitry.

    It should be reserved for special occaions and for immigration/naturalization. Do away with it in schools altogether, and certainly leave God out of it.

    I always rebelled against it when I was growing up. I am very pleased to see this.

  134. Re:Not Pledge, But Act Of Congress Adding "Under G by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2

    The why is it still there?? (The "Under God" bit, not the court)

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  135. I don't speak the pledge by FrozedSolid · · Score: 1

    When I was younger, I just did what I was suppposed to do, say the pledge, eat my lunch, color between the lines, etc. Once I got into around the 6th grade, I started to question why I would recite the pledge, I couldn't come up with a real reason, so I stopped.

    Now, I'm in high school. I still don't recite the pledge. At first, the kids would actually laugh at me, as though I was trying to draw attention by being insubordinate. When I asked them why they recited the pledge, they didn't have an answer. In fact, after that, pretty much all the people in my homeroom stopped doing it (save a few devout catholics and some others).

    Truthfully, I like the pledge for 1 reason. It's another 45 seconds or so that I can use to do my homework saving me the trouble of doing it at home =). Other than that, it has no relevance to me.

    --
    When all freedom is outlawed only the outlaws have freedom
  136. I know this is redundant... by DuBBs2ooo · · Score: 1

    As a Christian I find it funny to think of how it seems that we are lifting the Constitution as a doucment out of its historical context. In all the charters of the 13 colonies that I have read I find 'the spreading of the Gospel of Jesus Christ' to be a central emphasis to a majority of them. Likewise, our founding fathers were not areligious persons, on of the first things built in Washington D.C. was the nations official chapel. Religion, or more appropriately faith, is a key factor in the formation of our great nation. Some of the revisionist historians would like us to think otherwise. Now I know that some of our founding fathers were not Christian and that is not the issue. The issue is that the constitution was written in a context where most people were used to a government and church relationship that resulted in oppression, inadequate education and lots of other horrible things. But the concept of separating church and state is not a constitutional idea, the constitution forbade the government to endorse one religious view over another, that's all, it did not remove religion from government, it simply kept who was controlling what in check. I know the world would be a far better place if we could possibly add some context to these arguments because our nation was founded as one of faith in God the creator. I know I'm probably in the VAST MINORITY but evolution is not fact, it's theory and a lousy one at that, and those who want to force it down my kids throat as fact are no better than a evangelist who doesn't know when to "dust the sand from his feet" and move on.

    --
    +----DuBBs2ooo----+
    +The King of Fools+
    +-----------------+
    1. Re:I know this is redundant... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The world would be a better place if we removed relgionists from it. I can't think of a single war in the history of humanity that didn't have religion as the fundamental cause. God is fucking evil, and people who use the mythology of this being to push their power-hungry agenda's are also fucking evil. Morality is a human term, and God was created in the image of MAN, not the other way round. The sooner more people realized this, the sooner we would solve a significant number of problems in the world.

    2. Re:I know this is redundant... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "[When] the [Virginia] bill for establishing religious freedom... was finally passed,... a singular proposition proved that its protection of opinion was meant to be universal. Where the preamble declares that coercion is a departure from the plan of the holy author of our religion, an amendment was proposed, by inserting the word "Jesus Christ," so that it should read "a departure from the plan of Jesus Christ, the holy author of our religion." The insertion was rejected by a great majority, in proof that they meant to comprehend within the mantle of its protection the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and Mahometan, the Hindoo and infidel of every denomination." --Thomas Jefferson: Autobiography, 1821. ME 1:67

      Actually, you're in the vast majority. It's only the delusional brainwashing of your religon that makes you think otherwise. I wish you were right, but sadly, you're not. *patpat*

  137. This country was founded by NetNinja · · Score: 0

    on Judeo Christian principals. Wasn't that why those pillgrams came over here? To practice any religion they wanted? Or was it that fine good coffee that america grew? or that yummy corn?

    How sad. Let them do what they want. God will be here soon to sort them out.

    1. Re:This country was founded by michaelas · · Score: 1

      This country was founded on Judeo Christian principals

      Was it? Which ones? The seven deadly sins? The ten commandments? Only 2 of the ten commandments are law (3 in some places). Many of the founding fathers were not even "Christian". Where do you get this from?

      ...Michael...

  138. I haven't said "Under God" in years... by avarame · · Score: 1

    I am an atheist. I am in high school. For the past, oh six years or so, I simply haven't said the words "under God" during the pledge. I say everything else, usually in unison, but when we get to the phrase in question, I close my mouth and stay silent for two words. I start right back up at "indivisible", and carry on to a strong finish. By now it's habit and I barely notice it. No one (at least not at my school!) is forcing you to say every word and listening for it. In fact, you're not even required to say the pledge - just stand up and put your hand over your heart and face the flag, that's enough. I figure, though, not all schools are as relatively liberal as mine.

    --
    Save time now so you can waste it later
  139. Insignificancy works both ways by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 2

    If those two words are so trivial as to be ignorable by those who are offended, then the reverse is also true: christians should be able to ignore NOT having those two words.

  140. RE: ...colective diapers. by Coreigh · · Score: 0

    One more thing.
    To hell with the original meaning of anything.
    Meanings change. Accept it. Gay didn't used to mean homosexual. Cock doesn't always mean rooster. V-8 isn't necesarily a vegetable drink.

    --



    "Waitress I need two more boat-drinks..."
  141. Another Scoop for Slashdot! by Spamhead · · Score: 1

    (Watching what little Karma I have fall down the drain...)

    Wow! "News for Nerds" reaches a new cosmic low. I'd personally like to see more coverage about Parliamentary Procedure, but I can sure see how this Pledge of Allegiance stuff applies better to the Slashdot crowd.

    Please people, can we avoid the stupid crap that is covered Ad Nauseum by CNN, USAToday, and freakin' MSNBC?

    Before I can post a comment I'm supposed to follow Important Stuff like "Please try to keep posts on topic."

    Why in the hell am I supposed to keep posts on topic when the story shouldn't even be here in the first place?

    Taco needs to add a "Stupid Story Threshold" to the User Preferences page so we can weed this junk out.

    --
    Everybody Wang-Chung tonight!
  142. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a fabulous troll your post was.... or how fabulously stupid you are. It's impossible to tell.

  143. What is important? by TheChacal · · Score: 1

    Everyone who is pissed off that we are spending tax dollars on something as trivial as the constitutionality of the "Pledge of Allegiance" raise their hand.

    While Congress takes away our rights and the DMCA remains on the books, (don't even get me started on the bill suggesting it is OK for media companies to DOS Kazaa, et. al) we have our courts tied up with this kind of foolishness.

    Why just attack the GOD question? Hmmm? What about a lawsuit questioning whether it is constitutional to have children even pledge their allegiance when they are minors?

    This is a petty issue that is taking time and resources away from issues that are far more important. It is a shame that someone from this guys school district didn't just take him aside and say -- here is your voucher go to a different school asshole.

    Sigh.

    Chacal

  144. One nation, under Crom by soupforare · · Score: 1

    "...To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women"

    Hell, it goes with our international policy, why not? :P

    --
    --- Do you believe in the day?
  145. Evolution should be next by patandkate · · Score: 1

    As a Christian, I find it upsetting that impressionable children in public schools are forced to learn an unproven theory (Evolution) as fact.

    You say that certain children can opt out of the study? I agree. The athiest's daughter could have easily stopped talking during the pledge as well.

    1. Re:Evolution should be next by Chris+Parrinello · · Score: 1

      As a human being, I find these people's willing scientific illiteracy upsetting.

      Unfortunately, the problem won't go away since these people tend to breed a lot more due to their ignorance of sex education (because it tells people how to have sex and sin!) and contraceptives. Their ignorant children will populate the planet and sit around thinking that dinosaurs and people lived at the same time and that fossils were put in rocks to test Christian faith.

    2. Re:Evolution should be next by josepha48 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      There is a difference between not taking a class (opting out of evolution) and being in a class and having been forced to say the pledge that refers to god. What if the child is Hindu or Budist or believes in many gods, which god does this nation then fall under? What about athiest? For them it would fall under a none belief. What do they plug their ears too?

      Evolution is just that a theory. So are black holes. Does this mean that a discussion of black holes and the possiblity that they are real is also a bad idea? Learnig about the theory of evolution is not evil, unles you consider having knowledge evil. Noone is telling you you must believe it.

      The problem that you fail to realize is that the the bible that you read today in 'us english' has been transulated from Ancient Hebrew, to many other languages, like Latin and Greek and Roman, and interpreted, books have been dropped and added to it and then misinterpreted. There are many words that do not transulate or have been transulated with questionable transulations. Also before it was ever written down it was passed down by word of mouth for thousands of years. Do you think Abraham wrote about himself? Did Adam have a paper and pencil? Probably not. Ever play the telephone game? Things get misconstrued.

      In the original text of Hebrew there are beliefs by people who spend their lives studing the bible that the words Nature and God are actually interchangable. Thus Nature is God and God is Nature. If this is true then evolution was both by God (as Nature) and creation was by Nature (as God) and BOTH Creation and Evolution are true! It does not matter which one then you believe becase they are the same.

      open your mind and realize the possibilities....

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!

    3. Re:Evolution should be next by patandkate · · Score: 1

      Science class:

      Teacher: Now class, I know that the book says Evolution is a theory, but let's just think of it as fact instead. It just makes too much sense to be wrong. The fittest of a certain society have advantages over others and are more likely to mate more, thus the advantages survive over time since the lesser beings cannot compete for essentials like food, water, and shelter. After a long time, the society is very different then it was in the past. Any questions?
      Student: So if monkeys evolved into humans, why are they still around?
      Teacher:Uhhh...
      Student:If, over many years, only the fittest of monkeys survived and turned into humans, how could the less-fit monkeys compete for survival?
      Student: Isn't it true that Darwin came up with the theory in order to prove that there is no God? It's not very scientific to pose the result, then make up a theory that concludes with that result, is it? Plus the theory is a tautology, as in blue is blue therefore blue is blue. That doesn't prove anything. It's circular!
      Teacher: ::head explodes::

    4. Re:Evolution should be next by patandkate · · Score: 1

      Nice well thought out post.

      The chance to discuss and discover how the world works and the best way to live in it are great as far as I'm concerned. People believe different things and that's the way it will always be. The "theory" part of evolution is not stated as heavily as it should be in public schools. The "fact" is mandated to students because no alternates are taught alongside. It's illegal to teach anything that contradicts with Evolution and I'm not just talking about Creation here (research this if you are interested).

      Yes, my Bible is an English translation. Does that mean that I read verses and believe what the translation means? No. As you know, the English language is not as descriptive as Hebrew. I (and you I imagine) cannot read Hebrew, so I personally learn the correct meaning and context of verses from someone who can read the text. Do I just roll over and believe everything they tell me? Not right away. I continually scrutinize everything I hear and match the logic with the truths I already know.

      What do the majority of people do when they hear about the theory of evolution? They have nothing to compare it to and accept it as fact. It's a shame.

    5. Re:Evolution should be next by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      It's called strawman.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    6. Re:Evolution should be next by DuBBs2ooo · · Score: 1

      I whole heartedly agree with this post...not because I am a Christian as well but because I want my kids to learn REAL science, not some ivory tower academic's ideas about how we came to be here...explain to me the Cambrian explosion, explain to me why every major faith remembers a world-wide flood. Explain to me how you know those million year old fossils are millions of years old...how do we know the isotopes measured by RadioCarbon dating were not more or less concentrated at different periods of time...if you weren't there then you can't prove it and it becomes a matter of faith, evolution is a faith built on smoke, mirrors or bad ideas and assumptions about how we think things should work...evolution is not good science and you can take God out of schools as soon as we can both agree that there is something there to remove, but since you don't think He's real then what is your beef?

      --
      +----DuBBs2ooo----+
      +The King of Fools+
      +-----------------+
    7. Re:Evolution should be next by josepha48 · · Score: 2
      "The "theory" part of evolution is not stated as heavily as it should be in public schools. The "fact" is mandated to students because no alternates are taught alongside."

      True, so which creation stories do you teach? There are several stories. There are stories that the american indians have, as well as islam creation, buda creation, etc. What I'd like to see is an impartial teaching of all of these. Unfortunately there are many who think that the teaching of any other theories other than their own are evil. Yes these people do exist, just see Jerry Falwell and Fred Phelps.

      "As you know, the English language is not as descriptive as Hebrew." Well actually it is not a matter of 'descriptive' as it is a matter of words just do not transulate. In india I am told, by friends who lived there, that their language has NO word for 'gay' or 'queer'. While there are gay people there they just don't have a word for it. The same is true about Hebrew, and yes I do have friends who are Jewish and read the bible in Hebrew. In fact the laptop I got from on of them had a Hebrew transulation program. More like a dictionary. I wish I kept that program.

      I was taught the story of creationism and evolution, so I know both angles. My conclusion is that if God == Nature then they are both true. There is nothing in the bible that says that this cannot be true. NOTHING.

      The problem that many are missing is that there are many people who are taught evolution is completely evil and they are ONLY taught creation and that it is a 6 day creation.

      on the first "DAY" God seperated the light from the darkness and called the light "DAY" and the dark night. - two meanings for the word day. So is this the "light" day or the day day?

      So what DAY was the earth created? Also what DAY was man created? So what is a DAY? Is it our 24 hour day? Probably not, but many who belive in pure creationism, think so. Extra Terristeral's would probably burst their bubbles.

      Also if Adam and Eve were the first humans and we are all their decendants, wouldn't that mean that their children would have had to have sex with each other or their parents to propagate?

      Read the story of Cain and Able if that has not been edited out of your bible. It says Cain took his wife and left. So where did his wife come from? Was it his sister?

      Here is a good read -> http://www.internet-at-work.com/hos_mcgrane/creati on/cstorymenu.html

      if one is mature enough to expand the mind..

      --

      Only 'flamers' flame!

    8. Re:Evolution should be next by EvanED · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you're mocking the theory or mocking the people who are mocking the theory or what, but I'll address this anyway for those who don't know:

      We did *NOT* evolve from monkeys.

      I shall repeat that.

      We *DID* not evolve from monkeys.

      Let that sink in before continuing.

      We share a common ancester, but the various human and monkey species split on the evolutionary ladder (another misnomer; it's not a ladder, it's a tree) some time ago, and continued to evolve separately.

      Now, monkeys are our closest relative on the evolutionary tree, but to say we evolved from them is as crazy as to say I am the child of my brother.

      (I'm almost positive the above is accurate. At least in general, this is how evolution works: you have a population of one species. They split into two groups incapable of mating, often by a geographic divide. The two groups devolop independently into separate species, but neither is the same as they were when they split. I am basing the previous information on the assumption that nothing extrodinary happened to keep monkeys from evolving while humans did. If this assumption is valid -- and the probability it is valid is stacked quite high -- then the above stands.)

    9. Re:Evolution should be next by himi · · Score: 2

      That's about right, yes. Though I believe the currently popular terminology is more along the lines of "bush" than tree or ladder - when you look at the details of the fossil record, there tends to be a lot of experimentation which then settles down over time, so you don't get nice clean branches, you get a big messy bush. Which may have changed since I last did and anthropology unit, but hey . . .

      As for the other crap the parent poster was throwing out, it's tragic - he (she? it?) could at least have done some research before creating a terribly broken argument like that. And unfortunately I'm too tired to pull it apart more . . .

      himi

      --

      My very own DeCSS mirror.
    10. Re:Evolution should be next by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      It's illegal to teach anything that contradicts with Evolution and I'm not just talking about Creation here (research this if you are interested).

      In science, you have data, and you have theories that explain the data.

      Evolution has occured; we know this from observing it in nature and from the fossel record. The theory of evolution explains the data. Just like we have observation of the effects of gravity, and we have a theory of gravity that explain the data.

      The theory of evolution is a well supported scientific theory, and is the foundation of modern biology. So it should be taught in a science class.

      Are you implying that Intelegent Design should be taught in a classroom? It's creationism with "God" edited out and replaced with an "intellegent designer" (wink,wink). Creationism isn't a scientific theory, and therefore shouldn't be taught in a science class. You could teach it in a religious class.

      -asb

    11. Re:Evolution should be next by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      explain to me why every major faith remembers a world-wide flood.

      Probably because most cities are along bodies of water. BTW, most Christian denominations don't believe that there was a "worldwide" flood. That was disproven 200 years ago, ironically by geologists out to prove the flood.

      if you weren't there then you can't prove it

      Can you disprove that the world was created Wednesday, and that all of our memories of the past, etc were also created? You can't.

      evolution is a faith built on smoke, mirrors or bad ideas and assumptions about how we think things should work.

      No evolution is not a "faith" in the religious sense. The theory of evolution explains the evidence, and makes predictions. Just like any scientific theory. It also is the foundation of biology.

      -asb

    12. Re:Evolution should be next by DuBBs2ooo · · Score: 1

      most Christian denominations don't believe that there was a "worldwide" flood

      I'm a southern baptist and I can tell you that any denomination that rejects the worldwide flood are not in line Biblical orthodoxy and are flat out wrong...as for those geologists, has anyone since re-examined the evidence, a lot changes in 200 years...

      Can you disprove that the world was created Wednesday, and that all of our memories of the past, etc were also created? You can't.

      This is a rather absurd comment, it deals with what we fundamentally percieve as reality, my guide book tells me the earth was completed 4000 years ago, I refer to Dr. Gerald L. Schroeder for one potential explanation of the days prior to completion....But if the world was created wednesday and all our memories also created then I ask who's God did that one..?

      No evolution is not a "faith" in the religious sense. The theory of evolution explains the evidence, and makes predictions. Just like any scientific theory. It also is the foundation of biology.

      Evolution fails to explain the cambrian explosion, how dinosaurs made the leap to birds, how small mammals became mammoths. It fails to explain, scientifically, the transition periods between species. There are no clear transitional forms and without those evolution can not stand real scientific scrutiny because evolution is supposed to explain those transitions which we have yet to come across.

      Why is it that my child has to learn about an ill-proven at an age where they aren't making the distinction between theory and hard scientific fact....teach them the fundamentals first and save the theories until they can make an accurate discernment...and always teach it as theory....

      --
      +----DuBBs2ooo----+
      +The King of Fools+
      +-----------------+
    13. Re:Evolution should be next by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      I'm a southern baptist and I can tell you that any denomination that rejects the worldwide flood are not in line Biblical orthodoxy and are flat out wrong


      No, they just reject that there was a global flood, and take it as being a very bad local flood. If you are worried about Biblical orthodoxy, you should be bothered that Genesis 1 and 2 don't agree exactly, or the two different ways Judas died.

      Evolution fails to explain the cambrian explosion, how dinosaurs made the leap to birds, how small mammals became mammoths. It fails to explain, scientifically, the transition periods between species. There are no clear transitional forms and without those evolution can not stand real scientific scrutiny because evolution is supposed to explain those transitions which we have yet to come across.

      Sorry, despite some creationist claims, there are no problems with the cambrian explosion. To quote
      Chris Nedin:


      What most people think of as the "Cambrian Explosion" is, in actual fact, not a sudden burst of life, but a rapid increase in the number of fossils found in the fossil record. This is because around this time organisms started to mineralize their exoskeletons using the abundant calcium and carbonate from the surrounding seawater. Previously to this, organisms had entirely organic exoskeletons similar to many insects today. This type of exoskeleton is not easily preserved and usually decays too rapidly to survive as a fossil. The much tougher mineralized exoskeletons preserved far better, resulting in a large increase in the number of fossils.

      The second claim usually made about the "Cambrian Explosion" is that most if not all of the major animal groups came into existance at this time. This claim is not correct. It is almost certain that such major groups as annelids (worms), cnidarian (corals and jellyfish), gastropods (snails) and probably arthropods have a pre-Cambrian history. It should be pointed out that almost all pre-Cambrian fossils have no hard parts such as mineralized exoskeletons, and as such they are very unlikely to be preserved.

      While there was a rapid (over a 5-10 million year period) diversification of animal life during the "Cambrian Explosion", this was a diversification from an already existing stem stock of organisms, which were soft bodied and thus underrepresented in the fossil record.

      What we see in the fossil record are representatives of all the major groups which possess mineralized body parts. This record funnels back to the Early Cambrian where most of the groups apparently disappear. This disappearance does not represent the origin of the group, as some would suggest, but the origin of mineralized hard parts. The groups continue to exist below their occurrence in the fossil record, but they appear to be absent because they have no hard parts and are not fossilised.

      The "Cambrian Explosion" represents what we call a taphanomic boundary, that is, it represents a large increase in the chances of organisms to be fossilised (by having hard parts) and hence appear in the fossil record. It does not represent the origin of those groups.


      As far as transitional forms, here is URL to a FAQ on it: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-transitional.h tml It also covers transitions from reptiles to mammals, and reptiles to birds. Again, evolution has no problems with transitional forms.

      Why is it that my child has to learn about an ill-proven at an age where they aren't making the distinction between theory and hard scientific fact....teach them the fundamentals first and save the theories until they can make an accurate discernment...and always teach it as theory....

      Well, the evidence shows that species evolved. There is no theory there. Now the theory explains how and why they evolved, and makes predictions - the theory makes the facts far more valuable than a set of datapoints.

      -asb
    14. Re:Evolution should be next by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      As for the other crap the parent poster was throwing out, it's tragic - he (she? it?) could at least have done some research before creating a terribly broken argument like that. And unfortunately I'm too tired to pull it apart more . . .

      He sounds like one of Jack T. Chick's brood. Chick published a track with a similar theme and similar lame arguements.

  146. LoL by greymond · · Score: 1

    (in my opinion) I do think that having the words "under god" is (not pushing religion) but definately gives a religious jab to you when you say it, so I can see why the court ruled the way they did - HOWEVER the word "god" is mixed in with just about every piece of our governments fundamental elements so unless someone REALLY ANAL wants to go through and REDO EVERYTHING - there isnt any point in actually trying to change our pledge or getting any type of settlement for hearing it at school. IT IS A CHOICE to say it at school - you don't have to say the pledge or even stand if you don't want to.

    1. Re:LoL by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
      Hello!

      Not everybody is a f*cking christian.

      When you're a seven year old, in school, you are not anywhere near strong enough emotionally, now wise enough intellectually, to say "It's a choice - I will not say that!"

      It's not a f*cking christian nation, never was.

      The people in power have for the most part been christians, but that doesn't translate into the same thing.

      t_t_b

      --
      I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
    2. Re:LoL by greymond · · Score: 1

      ummm, ok first of off - im not a christian - i'd be considered an agnostic (sonmeone who belives in a higher power that does not influenece AT ALL any of our mortal everyday lives) if you associate the word "god" with christian please allow me to enlighten you with the other gazillion religions that use the word "god/diety" and yes when your seven you can make the decision - BECAUSE when I was in 2nd grade (lets see that would have made me about 4yrs old) i chose not to say the pledge because I WAS NOT A US CITIZEN and i could understand that so if i could do it at 4yrs then if someone has a problem at 7 thats there own damn fault - or the fault of there parents for raising an ignorant kid - it would be like saying a 7 year can't make the choice between hopping in a strangers car or not - and it is a FACT that most of the founding fathers BELIEVED IN A GOD (noticed i said A god - not christian god) because they put it in all our fundamentals (ie: when you go to court you SWEAR ON A BIBLE

      and on another note by your argument - if the majority of people = X than X is the majority and represents the MAJORITY of the nation - although I think the majority are agnostic

      true atheism is very RARE - to this day i only know of one TRUE ATHEIST in all the people I talk to - so saying "god" could be associated with agnostic which IS the majority and DOES represent the nations (by popular vote MOST people DO believe in A "higher power")

      and if you TRULY are an atheist then i do hope the next time you get in a traffic jam you aren't using the term "JESUS CHRIST" since that would point more towards your own issues with christianity than anything else. :)

  147. Divided We Fall by ONOIML8 · · Score: 2

    This looks to be one more way to divide what's left of the country.

    --
    . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
  148. God Indivisible? by justfred · · Score: 1

    Although I agree with the court's ruling, my complaint here has always been with the LOCATION of the added phrase. When spoken, "...one nation, under God, indivisible.." becomes "..one nation under God indivisible..."; indivisible sounds like it's modifying God (God is indivisible?) and takes away from the original meaning, one nation indivisible (which you may recall was the subject of the Civil War).

  149. What the American Flag Stands For by RevRa · · Score: 1

    I read this on Commondreams a while ago, it really sums up my opinion on this matter.

    -rl

    Published on Wednesday, April 3, 2002 by Common Dreams
    What the American Flag Stands For
    by Charlotte Aldebron

    The American flag stands for the fact that cloth can be very important. It is against the law to let the flag touch the ground or to leave the flag flying when the weather is bad. The flag has to be treated with respect. You can tell just how important this cloth is because when you compare it to people, it gets much better treatment. Nobody cares if a homeless person touches the ground. A homeless person can lie all over the ground all night long without anyone picking him up, folding him neatly and sheltering him from the rain. School children have to pledge loyalty to this piece of cloth every morning. No one has to pledge loyalty to justice and equality and human decency. No one has to promise that people will get a fair wage, or enough food to eat, or affordable medicine, or clean water, or air free of harmful chemicals. But we all have to promise to love a rectangle of red, white, and blue cloth.

    Betsy Ross would be quite surprised to see how successful her creation has become. But Thomas Jefferson would be disappointed to see how little of the flag's real meaning remains.

    Charlotte Aldebron, 12, wrote this essay for a competition in her 6th grade English class.

    --
    - Kate
    "DNA is life. The rest is just translation."
    1. Re:What the American Flag Stands For by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      go fuck yourself and your Islamic Jihad family, goddamned fuckwad.

  150. Trust No One by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since it's the catch phrase from 'The Last Crusade', bills gotta have Indiana Jones where Lincoln is :)

  151. The Declaration of Independence by queequeg1 · · Score: 1

    by its own terms, was made in reliance of the protection of divine providence. More importantly, one of the main stated objectives of the Declaration was to allow a subjucated people to assume a position in the world to which God entitled them. In light of this travesty, I can see no other option than to repudiate this prosyletizing sham and humbly submit ourselves to British rule (as silly as the idea of having a queen may seem).

  152. The Declaration of Independance by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    From the Declaration of Independance:
    When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. [emphasis mine]

    May I point out usage of "God" in the Declaration of Independance? This is unconstitutional (even though it preceded the constitution) and therefore, the United States of America should IMMEDIATELY rescind this horrible document and transfer ownership back to England. Oh yeah, and they should send payment (plus interest and penalties) for the tea destroyed in Boston harbor. (And it'll be paid for with rocks and humans sold into slavery because our money, which holds "In God We Trust" will be ruled unconstitutional, and therefore, of worthless value.)

    1. Re:The Declaration of Independance by qslack · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How can the Declaration of Independence be unconstitutional when it isn't even a law or an action? It was not even written by our government, it was written by a private group of revolutionists.

    2. Re:The Declaration of Independance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Declaration of Independance was adopted by the Continental Congress of 1776, which is a direct predecessor to the present American government. Of course, as the Constitution was adopted it swept away all previous laws.

  153. Or... by cfish · · Score: 1

    Or as anti-christs would put it:

    "One nation, under no freaking god, indivisible..."

    Or as Satanists put it:

    "One nation, under Satan, indivisible..."

    Or perhaps like the hippies say, "One nation, under the Beatles, indivisible..." (Charles Manson believed it.)

    Have you ever thought about other possibilities? Like, people who don't believe in any type of god but believe that something else might rule? Do we really need to spend time debating on the stupid phrase? Nah. I say get rid of the pledge.

  154. What was the suit *really* about? by Trinition · · Score: 2

    As I understand it, the father who brought this suit didn't want his daughter to have to choose between feeling like an outcast and reciting something she din't believe in. Yes, he was an atheist. But even if the term "...under God..." were not in the pledge, she would still have to decide between reciting the pledge and feeling like an outcast if all the other classmates did participate.

    Now the older Supreme Court ruling said that students can't be explicitly required to recite the pledge (or other items, I believe). I understand the official complaint i this new suit to be that there is still an implicit compulsion to participate for fear of bein viewed as an outsider by your peers.

    Now, from reading comments under this story, I see many Slashdotters also have a problem with indoctrinating children with this pledge at all, regardless of the inclusion of a theistic phrase. But would this case have been brought without that phrase?

    Is this case about implicit compulsion or separation of church and state?

  155. Not as bad as it seems by Kevin+Stevens · · Score: 1

    As previously mentioned, the original pledge did not even have the line "one nation, under God" in it. This was added by a legislative order in 1954 (And I wonder how bored lawmakers were at the time that they had nothing better to do than ammend a line of a patriotic verse). The court is not saying the pledge can not be recited, but just that the phrase "one nation, under God" should be removed. Now think about this. the flow of the verse is not affected that much. The pledge is in its original form. This is not that big of a deal, and it promotes one of the key principles of our country, the SEPERATION of church and state. Now, it may seem a bit silly to worry about the church having an undue influence on politics, but at our nations founding this was a very real problem, and as Islamic terrorists have shown us, mixing church and politics is a very BAD thing(tm) even today. So really, the court is right. Its right in the constitution. this is not a gray area.

  156. Crutch or not it isn't as bad a smoke..... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    Crutch or not, people who belive in anything, from Allah, Xenu, Rasta, Jesus, Jehovah or whatever. They live longer, they get sick less, when they get sick they have a better chance of recovering and take less time in doing so. Medical study after medical study have found this to be true. Whether or not you accept it thats cool, people need crutches, in some form or another though. And Atheists take their belief structure to the point at which it is a religion.

    1. Re:Crutch or not it isn't as bad a smoke..... by jafac · · Score: 2

      Rasta was not a god - he was a prophet.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  157. Declaration of Independence by Chacham · · Score: 1
    I'd just like to remind you all of what got us here. It's an old, mostly forgotten, document called Declaration of Independence. It mentions:

    • the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them,
    • that all men are created equal
    • that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights
    • with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence


    While this does not mean you have to hold of their beliefs, it lets you know why they started the country in the first place. Their belief in a deity that created all. It just seems curious that the country would try to remove any vestiges of its founding.
  158. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  159. simple fix by 0vi_king · · Score: 0

    Can we not simply change it to:
    "One Nation,Under the Almighty Dollar , and so on.

    --
    - Life is what keeps you occupied while you are waiting to die
  160. Chanting schoolkids: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pledge allegiance
    to the principles
    of Liberty and Justice for all.
    The Flag
    of the United States of America,
    and the republic
    for which it stands,
    may or may not
    represent those principles
    at any given point in time.
    Especially if your skin is brown.

  161. The September Elections are coming... by Captain+McCrank · · Score: 1

    History will look back on this day as being the single most decisive blow against the Democrats in the 2002 September elections. There are 24 members of the ninth U.S. Court of Appeals - 14 were appointed by Bill Clinton and three by Jimmy Carter for a total of 17. Reagan and Bush 41 appointed only seven of them. Tom Daschle is holding up judicial nominees, and a majority of Americans will have absolutely no patience for this. I for one think today is a great day. The Republicans will finally be gaining control of the Senate! Now all we need is for Bush to pander a bit more to the Conservatives, and things will finally go right for this country!

  162. Not my experiance....... by jsimon12 · · Score: 2

    I have never met an Atheist that didn't at some point in the first day I got to know them tell me that they were an Atheist and God/Allah/whatever was crap.

    1. Re:Not my experiance....... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      I have never met an Atheist that didn't at some point in the first day I got to know them tell me that they were an Atheist and God/Allah/whatever was crap.

      Bad methodology: if person A is an atheist who happens not to be one who mentions it right away, how would you know? So all you're really saying is, "Every atheist who has told me he's an atheist has told me he's an atheist". Your select effects are overwhelming your data.
    2. Re:Not my experiance....... by ttfkam · · Score: 2

      Sure you have. They simply didn't tell you they were an atheist and you assumed otherwise or, more likely, didn't think of them in a religious/non-religious context.

      I would assert that there is a much higher concentration of atheists on slashdot than is present in the general public in the U.S. Check the discussions. It's actually quite rare for a religious/anti-religious statement to come up unless the story specifically brings up the topic.

      By all means, check it for yourself. Look at all of the users who have been unabashed atheists in this discussion and read their previous posts. See how many of those posts are discussing religion when the story topic is not related to religion.

      Think of it this way: All of those guys who wear purple underwear just come out and announce it within a day of me meeting them. It's annoying.

      With that in mind, are you *positive* that you've known about the underwear choice of every man you've met? Are you sure at least one of them wasn't concealing their purple underwear fetish?

      Atheists are everywhere. E-V-E-R-Y-W-H-E-R-E-!-!-!

      --

      - I don't need to go outside, my CRT tan'll do me just fine.
    3. Re:Not my experiance....... by jeeryg_flashaccess · · Score: 1

      Woooo! In your experience...blah blah blah. Everybody has experiences that disprove everybody elses. Until you can provide some statistics that have been conducted in a scientific and non-biased way then shut up.

      This goes for everybody else too!

      Don't use words like "generally" or statements like "well this happened to me so i'm right"

      SHUT UP!

      Greg

      --
      Life is like pants... fit in or you don't fit in.
    4. Re:Not my experiance....... by scotch · · Score: 2
      Are you sure that your coverage is complete? IOW, of all the people you've known for more than a day, you can positively identify all of those that are atheists? Perhaps some people you've known for a while are atheists, but the subject has never come up? Perhaps you're judging the entire group by a vocal minority?

      Rarely, when religion comes up with someone I've know for a while, and the conversation leads to self-identification, I'll say that I am an atheist. This frequently surprises people who assume all atheists wear it on their sleeve. Or perhaps it's a case of people always assuming that others are like them in thought and action. Me? I asume everyone is an atheist until otherwise indicated ;)

      --
      XML causes global warming.
  163. Great Decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I totally approve of removing that mythical figure from the American pledge of allegiance. I hope that many idiot archconservative Christians have a well-deserved coronary today.

  164. Re:$$, too A loss for Patriotism, a win for GPL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    since you need money to buy Windows, then does that make Windows and closed source software illegal and unconstitutional!!

    Only free software can be distributed because other wise it would be piracy!

  165. Bigger fish to fry... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

    Sure, "...under God" and "In God we trust" get people up in arms, but we need to focus on the important issues, such as...

    THE INTERNATIONAL MASONIC CONSPIRACY

    I don't want to be forced to carry around $1 bills whose stylish Masonic pyramid hides a secret transmitter which the Illuminati might use to track my every move. And, if I would rather carry around a few coins in place of each $1 bill, I would have to go all the way down to sets of ten dimes, lest I carry about quarters whose embossed bust of a 32nd degree Freemason emit mind-control waves.

    1. Re:Bigger fish to fry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, you can't mess with the dollar

    2. Re:Bigger fish to fry... by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
      Personally, I'm *much* more concerned about the 100,000,000 United Nations troops deployed in the woods of northern Minnesota, just waiting for orders from the Trilateral Commission to come sweeping down into Washington, DC and establish a One World Government(tm)...

      t_t_b

      --
      I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
  166. Simple to fix by bobtheprophet · · Score: 1

    Just take a cue from funkadelic, and make it "One nation under a groove, getting down just for the funk of it."

    --
    Don't give me none of this "nature theme" business.
  167. Citizens by tconnors · · Score: 2

    Someone should tell your president.

    Good luck getting it through that A-hole!

    "No, I don't know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered as patriots. This is one nation under God." -George H. W. Bush, 41st President

  168. Godwin's law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Godwin's law reads, "As a Usenet discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one." (with the implication that whoever mentioned the Nazis lost the argument.)
    (FYI)

  169. Liberty and Justice??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this is a good decision. I always hated the fact, that I was forced to stand and pledge allegiance to our country every morning.

    Even in the 'Pledge of Allegiance', it states 'liberty and justice', what kind of free country promoting liberty, forces their children and teachers to pledge allegiance every morning.

    Maybe I'm just not a good comrade.

    -Jason Yates

  170. The next thing you know.... by GammaStorm · · Score: 1

    ....it'll be a felony to say 'God Bless America' and the 'G' word will be banned from radio by the FCC.

    The extreme PC of the US makes me want to vomit in my own shoes. Excuse me so I can find some ethnic group to insult to make me feel better.

    1. Re:The next thing you know.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....it'll be a felony to say 'God Bless America' and the 'G' word will be banned from radio by the FCC.

      ABC has already taken some abuse for "bleeping" out the word Jesus from morning shows (some host wanted to say "thank Jesus" and the "Jesus" part was bleeped out as if it were profanity).

  171. NEWSFLASH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess we will have to declare the constitution unconstiutional since it refers to God. Jefferson reffered to God numerous times in the Declaration of Independence. George Washington's farewell speech that is spoken to the congress every year refers to God and religion. Our money is labeled "In God we trust". This country was founded on the belief of practicing religion without fear of persecution. Just because athiests choose not to practice religion does not mean they can change this country's principles. God is a generic and universal term that refers to a creator. This country was founded on a belief of God, just not a specific one. Thats your choice, and you don't have to fear government reprisal for whichever God you choose to be yours, or even if you choose not to believe in God. Thats what Freedom of Religion is all about.

  172. Dissenting judge is bad at logic by Dirtside · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Justice Ferdinand F. Fernandez (enough F's? quick! get this man a stage name) partially dissented with the decision, and puts forth quite a bit of poor argumentation [1].

    One of his quotes was:

    I recognize that some people may not feel good about hearing the phrases recited in their presence, but, then, others might not feel good if they are omitted.
    The logic here is that either way, someone will be offended -- if you don't include "under God", believers will be offended, and if you DO include "under God", atheists (or believers in other faiths) will be offended. The problem with this is that a vast majority of government laws, texts, and other actions contain nothing referring to God. He fails to address the fact that the phrase's presence in the Pledge is not about "feeling good" -- the Pledge, as an instrument of Congress, may not say anything EITHER WAY about religion or God. Omitting "under God" from the PoA no more denigrates religion than does omitting references to God from the Telecommuncations Act of 1996.

    His main point is that the harm caused by "under God" is de minimis, meaning so insignificant as to have no measurable effect. I disagree on this point, although it is difficult to prove one way or the other, but I see it thus: The "under God" reference has been a part of the national zeitgeist for coming on 50 years. An overwhelming majority of Americans know the Pledge of Allegiance, and even if most never contemplate its meaning beyond reciting it occasionally, its values and meaning creep their way into our minds every time we hear it. This is not a bad thing in itself; anything repeated to you often enough will be ingrained into your consciousness.

    But I don't think anyone can seriously deny that the majority of Americans see religion as something patriotic and necessary -- atheists are often seen as unpatriotic or un-American, even though such a comparison is, on its face, contrary to the definition of those words. Even former President Bush (the elder) said that he doesn't think atheists should be considered citizens, let alone patriots. "under God"'s presence in the government-backed Pledge of Allegiance has, for the last 50 years, undoubtedly left a mark on the beliefs and minds of Americans, and I would argue that it has at the very least contributed to our country's tendency toward credulous trust in the Almighty rather than reason and logic.

    I've given away my bias here; I'm an atheist, and I agree with the court's decision. I also believe that "In God We Trust" should be removed from our currency, for similar reasons. Nonetheless, Justice Goodwin has acted properly in considering the case in a manner similar to what the Supreme Court has done on similar cases. Justice Fernandez's protestations seem to be based on nothing more than his own personal opinion, rather than relevant precedent.

    [1] Justice Fernandez also appeals to emotion by suggesting that popular songs such as "God Bless America" or "America the Beautiful" may be taken away from us. He even mentions the third stanza of "The Star-Spangled Banner", our national anthem. Ignoring the fact that it is the fourth stanza that contains a reference to God (the version of the SSB that you hear at baseball games contains only the first stanza), I agree that he has a point -- however the point is not in what he says, but the fact that he says it at all. There will be loud opposition to anything preventing the government from referencing God (the First Amendment? what's that?), and attempts to do so will be met with emotional resistance. On the other hand, even IF the SSB is, by law, our national anthem, there is no law that I know of which requires it to be recited or sung on any government-sponsored occasion. (If there is such a law, then it should rightly be struck down, following the same logic.) Hence the SSB's being law (if it is) would quite possibly not fail the Establishment Clause tests so commonly used by the SCOTUS.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    1. Re:Dissenting judge is bad at logic by jafac · · Score: 2

      Well, I'm a Christian, I love The Lord, and all that. But I agree, we need to get rid of this "under God" bit and the "in God We Trust" - in my opinion, it's UnAmerican (TM).

      IF you remove choice from a person, you remove their ability to be GOOD of their own free will. So what does a good deed mean when it's compulsory?

      I've *never* said that an Atheist is making the wrong choice, and I fully support their right to be left alone to practice or not practice whatever ideology they want. We all should have the right to be left alone.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    2. Re:Dissenting judge is bad at logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      very short comment ... but since atheism takes the position 0 ... no God ... isn't omission siding with atheism?

      to be completely fair, quote "may not say anything EITHER WAY about religion or God." /endquote ... shouldnt there be mention made of all possibilities that are acknowledged ...

      which is incredibly unrealistic, we'd be waiting half an hour per pledge ... =) ...

    3. Re:Dissenting judge is bad at logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It is official; Netcraft confirms: *BSD is dying

      One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.

      You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.

      FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.

      Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.

      OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.

      Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.

      All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BS is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.

      Fact: *BSD is dying

    4. Re:Dissenting judge is bad at logic by n-baxley · · Score: 2

      I think that the judge does a have a good point here. The pledge has to be taken by itself (apart from other government documents) and as it stands in it's current form (post 1950) when deciding how to handle it. Removing the phrase is a decidedly anti-religious decision, so yes the "believers" will be upset. By removing the phrase, the government is taking a stand on this issue.

      Another mistake you make, and I've seen made in countless other posts here is that you pit athesits and other faiths against believers in God. By definition, anyone who is an not an atheist is either a believer or an agnostic (which you could hardly call a faith).

    5. Re:Dissenting judge is bad at logic by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Omission is saying nothing about the status of God. What the judge and you are (incorrectly) saying is that omission is the same as "under no god".

    6. Re:Dissenting judge is bad at logic by Danse · · Score: 2

      The issue at hand is the act that added the phrase in the first place. That act was unconstitional, and therefore the removal of the phrase is the only proper solution. You can't just say, "oh, well it's there now, and you can't take it out because that would be anti-religious." It was pro-religious when the phrase was put in. That was the mistake that is being corrected here. The government is not supposed to take any sort of stand whatsoever on religious issues, so clearly, adding the phrase was unconstitutional.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
  173. Re:agnostics and atheists agree by frumiousbar · · Score: 1

    I agree - the simple statement professing the existance of god is a religious statement that some of us object to. Note that this type of thing shows up in other places such as the Boy Scout Oath.

  174. Maje a few changes by verloren · · Score: 1

    Warning: IANAABMDI (I am not an American, but my daughter is)

    Once my daughter is old enough to go to school I figure I'll train her to recite one of two alternate versions:

    "I've been forced to pledge allegiance to the flag..."

    or

    "One Nation, under Satan, ..."

    Don't get me wrong, I'll make sure she loves her country (and her parent's country). But she doesn't _need_ to worship someone else's God, and she doesn't _need_ to recite prose to be a patriot. As the always wise :) Jessie Ventura said when discussing a bill in Minnesota that would have made the pledge required (with an opt-out)

    {paraphrase}
    "What problem are we solving here? After Sept 11th is there a shortage of patriotism?"
    {/paraphrase}

  175. Not quite the original version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The original version began "I pledge allegiance to my flag". Apparently the guy who wrote the original version was really annoyed when they changed it to "the flag". In 1954 he was not upset, due to having died a while ago.

    1. Re:Not quite the original version by leek · · Score: 2, Informative
    2. Re:Not quite the original version by toriver · · Score: 2

      Wasn't "indivisible" added after the Civil war?

    3. Re:Not quite the original version by leek · · Score: 1

      Yes, I think so.

    4. Re:Not quite the original version by leek · · Score: 2, Informative
      Actually, the Pledge was not created until 1892, well after the Civil War.

      The Pledge of Allegiance was written by Francis Bellamy, a Baptist minister and Christian Socialist, in 1892.

  176. Re:Just saw on the news.. by DrVxD · · Score: 1

    > President Bush called the ruling ridiculous.
    Which is proof positive that the ruling must be right...

    --
    Not everything that can be measured matters; Not everything that matters can be measured.
  177. What GOD would think... by DigitalHammer · · Score: 1

    Here's a transcript of CNN's telephone interview with God...

    Reporter: This is CNN Headline news. Today is a very sad day for one religious entity...that is God. The Court of Appeals ruled the "under god" phrase in the Pledge unconstitutional, and is proceding to remove it. Due to budget constraints, we are forced to use collect calls only, with th AT&T Collect calling service. (Yay more advertising revenue) Viewers, please wait for one moment while we call God...

    (A minute later)

    Reporter: How do you feel about the removal of your name from the American Pledge of Allegiance, Almighty One?

    God: INFIEDELS! I WILL SURELY DESTROY THE ONES RESPONSIBLE! THOU SHALL HAVE AN UNPLEASENT ARMAGEDDON.

    Reporter: Excuse me, Holy Ghost, we have George W. Bush on the line. Pleased be warned that he is on Prozac, which has made him extremly joyful.

    God: I KNOW. IT'S THE REASON WHY I CANT SEND HIM TO HELL-SATAN WOULDNT STAND HIM.

    Bush: YO, WASSUP THY LORD?!

    God: BUSH, HOW COULD YOU ALLOW THIS TO HAPPEN? YOURE SUPPOSED TO CONVERT THE PEOPLE OF THE WORLD TO MY COMMAND YET YOU REMOVE MY NAME FROM YOUR PLEDGE. I'D LOVE TO SEND YOU TO HELL FOR THIS BUT SATAN WONT BE ABLE TO TOLERATE YOUR DRUG-INDUCED GAIETY.

    Bush: DUH-HUH! SO WHAT MY HOMIE? IT'S THEM DARN EDUMACATIONMENT DIRECTORS AND JUDGES THAT MADE THAT SHINIZNIZ UP.

    God: WELL, LOOKS LIKE ILL HAVE TO SEND THEM TO HELL INSTEAD. ENOUGH OF THIS. I MUST LEAVE. AND BUSH, IF YOU EVER DO MAKE IT TO HELL, TELL SATAN I DON'T HAVE TIME TO FIGHT ANOTHER HOLY WAR. AND IF HE WANTS TO PLAY ANOTHER ROUND OF QUAKE WITH ME, TELL HIM TO USE THE LATEST CHRISTIAN-SAFE MOD USE ON MY VERSION OF LINUIX, NOT HIS VERSION OF WINDOWS! I DONT SEE THE REASON WHY BILL GATES WOULD GIVE H...

    Board Operator: Due to the extreme cost of calling Heaven (A gated community), CNN news has decided to cut the call at the 3 minute mark. CNN News has made a collect call to your residence. Will you accept the charges?

    (God ponders for a few seconds)

    God: NO.

    Reporter: God didn't accept the charges? Damn, there goes my job...

  178. hahahaha by geek · · Score: 1

    Man I love this post! I actually got into it over this exact thing with my friends dad (born again idiot). Of course the world is only 4000 years old regardless of how many multi million year old fossils we find. The world is flat too, didn't you know Satan controls the scientists?

    I'm so tired of the religious nut cases in the country. Mormons especially. No state is as badly infected with religious lunacy as Utah.

  179. I've always been bothered by Mike+Hicks · · Score: 2

    The Pledge of Allegiance has bothered me just about as long as I can remember. I'm pretty sure that I went along happily with all the other kids when we learned it in first grade, but that was the only year we recited it. Anyway, I've always been concerned about how there are different religions in this world, and that there are people who don't believe in any diety.

    Anyway, I support the court's decision, but I suspect the Supremes will give it a big whack.

    1. Re:I've always been bothered by talks_to_birds · · Score: 1
      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Nader.

      Thanks for Bush...

      A lot.

      No. I mean it.

      Really.

      Thanks a whole f*ck of a lot...

      t_t_b

      --
      I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
    2. Re:I've always been bothered by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      no, you can thank kathy harris and the supreme court for Bush.

  180. Woho! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally a decent ruling!

    Now if we can only get a real pledge that is more appropriate for the currennt US, I was thinking from the South Park Movie the song,

    "Shut your fucking face Uncle Fucker", as more befitting of a true american.

  181. This Is Why We Are Angry by duck_prime · · Score: 1

    I, for one, am completely for this ruling, speaking as a person who always felt uncomfortable mumbling those 2 words in grade school.

    Okay... here's why I, for one, am angry. There are two main reasons:

    One: There seems to be a sense today that the United States is not to have its own culture, that we are merely a clearing-house for whatever society wants to move their way of life to these shores. I for one believe that our current approach of least-common-denominator culture weakens traditional American values, and regret this bitterly. There is much to value in "decent, God-fearing people" and traditional American ways of life.

    Two: The "Establishment of Religion" clause is being misused. The original idea was to curtail religious oppression. But it is being used to suppress all religion, in the name of atheism. All kinds of outre philosophies are snuck into our schools, and gain entry precisely because they are not couched in religious terms. For instance, it would be perfectly legal to teach communism in the classroom.

    Let me add to all this that while we are not Christians -- especially on Slashdot, it seems! -- this is a largely Christian society, and its rules are largely based on the good-ol' Judeo-Christian worldview. There has to be a balance somewhere between protection of minority views and legalized suppression of majority views.

    Good Lord, we even have people posting here who object to the non-religious part of the Pledge. Since when is it wrong to teach patriotism? If our national consciousness has an ounce of self-preservation instinct -- and much of my point is that we have lost that culturally -- we should celebrate the Pledge of Allegiance.

    (gasp)

    But then, that's just me.

    1. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Yunzil · · Score: 2

      There is much to value in "decent, God-fearing people" and traditional American ways of life.

      OK, then use the original Pledge, which didn't have the "under God" phrase, even though it was written by a minister. Oh, and it sounds better anyway.

      But it is being used to suppress all religion, in the name of atheism.

      Oh bullshit. You are free to worship any god(s) [or no gods] you so choose... on your own time and with your own money. I don't see the 9th Circuit Court saying that all churches had to be closed. What the "Establishment Clause" is is being used for is to prevent 'official' governmental proclamations/releases/statements/whatever from endorsing a particular religious belief.

      this is a largely Christian society, and its rules are largely based on the good-ol' Judeo-Christian worldview.

      Ha ha. Wrong.

      we should celebrate the Pledge of Allegiance.

      So, as I said, go recite the old version.

    2. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How is removing the "under god" part curtailing ALL relgious expression? It is, in fact, supporting the original idea which is to curtail religious oppression. Forcing athiests and buddhists to recite what is effectively a christian prayer every morning is opression.


      Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel. If you have to TEACH it, then you are doing something wrong.

    3. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by duck_prime · · Score: 1

      How is removing the "under god" part curtailing ALL relgious expression? It is, in fact, supporting the original idea which is to curtail religious oppression. Forcing athiests and buddhists to recite what is effectively a christian prayer every morning is opression.

      Strangely enough, removing "under God" from the p.o.a. is more of a cultural problem than a religious one; the idea being that even one annoyed non-christian can now block what had been a cherished tradition for decades... this falls squarely into my complaint that our culture, as pushed by the schools, is going to the lowest common denominator: what can we do that will annoy no one. This is the "clearing house" idea I mentioned earlier. Being buddhist and reciting the p.o.a. ... is that much worse than being christian and being indoctrinated with the views being pushed by Health Ed classes these days?

      Point being, no matter what you have in the schools, there is always a cultural or religious force behind it being there. There is a valid disagreement here (despite what AC thinks, whew! ;) about which cultural/religious forces to favor, and how much is the majority allowed to impose on the rest. Right now, I think, we are swinging too far in favor of minority opinions; the government should not be compel us to deny our heritage in order to make immigrants more comfortable.

      Right now, by law, secular philosophies are favored, and religious expression is being forced, bit-by-bit, from any public scene, hidden away like an embarrassing relative in the attic. I would as soon we still had nativity scenes on public lands .

      I note with special interest that in Hawaii, Christian notices are bad, but Hawai'ian religious symbols are "culture".

      Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel. If you have to TEACH it, then you are doing something wrong.

      Hey, when you're born you don't know much. Someone has to teach you patriotism (let's hope it's your folks). The government should also encourage people to love America; it's in their own best interest.

    4. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Matthew+Weigel · · Score: 2
      Good Lord, we even have people posting here who object to the non-religious part of the Pledge.

      You betcha. Theologically it smacks of making the State the state religion, and is thus idol worship, and practically, it's low-key brainwashing.

      Are the United States so grand? I'd rather be here than living in China, but that's hardly a vote of confidence. Should I so completely pledge myself to this country that I would be unable to ethically decide, "I like that country over there better"?

      If our national consciousness has an ounce of self-preservation instinct -- and much of my point is that we have lost that culturally

      Are you kidding me? The founders of the US made pretty clear that they were trying hard to make a good nation, but that, inevitably, it would be a bad nation, that might need to be overthrown, or at least shaken up a bit... and that the preservation of the state should be less important than the preservation of the rights of the people.

      The preservation instinct is what makes the country bad, because the tiny little parts of the country can't see whether a change that hurts them hurts the nation, or helps it.

      The preservation instinct leads a bad President to take away our rights before we take away his power. The preservation instinct leads us to inculcate our children with a blind love for the US as it is, so that they will preserve it.

      --
      --Matthew
    5. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      Right now, I think, we are swinging too far in favor of minority opinions; the government should not be compel us to deny our heritage in order to make immigrants more comfortable.

      So, which tribe are you? Apache? Navaho? Seminole?

      As to your ill-informed comment about immigrants, the majority of immigrants coming into this country are Christian. They became that when the missionaries destroyed their religious art, treasures, books, etc. and forced Christianity on them.

    6. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by duck_prime · · Score: 1
      Right now, I think, we are swinging too far in favor of minority opinions; the government should not be compel us to deny our heritage in order to make immigrants more comfortable.

      So, which tribe are you? Apache? Navaho? Seminole?

      As to your ill-informed comment about immigrants, the majority of immigrants coming into this country are Christian. They became that when the missionaries destroyed their religious art, treasures, books, etc. and forced Christianity on them.

      So you admit that immigrants coming in and trashing the local culture is a bad thing? Hmm. By the way, Navajos, Apaches, and Seminoles had exactly zero books to destroy, and precious little treasure.

      Seriously, though, I think you're in the wrong argument. This argument is about whether the government should promote what I'm calling "traditional American culture", snide intentional misunderstandings aside.
    7. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      So you admit that immigrants coming in and trashing the local culture is a bad thing?

      When it involves torturing and murduring people that don't share your religious beliefs, yes.

      By the way, Navajos, Apaches, and Seminoles had exactly zero books to destroy, and precious little treasure.

      Do you really believe that immigrants coming into this country are native Americans? The largest immigrant population (and the one I was referring to) is hispanic, many of whom had ancestors who were Mayan, Incan, and Aztec before the missionaries "taught them" about Christianity through plunder, torture, and murder.

      This argument is about whether the government should promote what I'm calling "traditional American culture", snide intentional misunderstandings aside.

      Traditional American culture or traditional European culture? The Americans that were here before the Europeans were not Christians.

      The government should not "promote" any religious belief, whether atheism, Christianity, Buddhism, or any other religion. Eisenhower was wrong to add "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.

    8. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by duck_prime · · Score: 1
      (Delete lots of material about Aztecs which is really missing the point. The Aztecs were rude to their neighbors, the Spaniards were a rough crowd too, whatever. We're talking about the U.S.A. here.)

      This argument is about whether the government should promote what I'm calling "traditional American culture", snide intentional misunderstandings aside.

      Traditional American culture or traditional European culture? The Americans that were here before the Europeans were not Christians.

      The government should not "promote" any religious belief, whether atheism, Christianity, Buddhism, or any other religion. Eisenhower was wrong to add "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.

      I'm afraid we may have reached the point in the argument where we hit underneath the logic to where the emotional axioms live.

      I believe the government should promote the majority culture. You don't.

      I readily concede that the p.o.a. is illegal as stands. However, there'd been a silent understanding all these years that let it stay, because it served the needs of the populace, and they liked it. I still like it, and am sorry to see it go, or to go back to the pre-Eisenhower way.
    9. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by fougasse · · Score: 1
      Being buddhist and reciting the p.o.a. ... is that much worse than being christian and being indoctrinated with the views being pushed by Health Ed classes these days?

      Yes. The Pledge is, well, just that: to recite it is to specifically assert one's belief in a specifically Judeochristian deity. Health Ed classes require nothing even remotely approaching this.

      By "Health Ed", I assume you mean instruction about the factual basics of sex and methods of preventing pregnancy/STDs. Among the differences between this and reciting the Pledge:

      • Sex ed really has nothing to do with Christianity. Those who are offended are social conservatives of pretty much any religion.
      • The Pledge specifically acknowledges a single deity; anyone who does not believe in this deity will therefore by definition not agree with the Pledge. Sex Ed makes no reference to any religious belief.
      • Sex Ed is instruction; facts (facts selected with an agenda, certainly, but then most are) are taught. The Pledge is an affirmation of belief -- reciting it has nothing to do with learning. No class that I know of requires recital of "I pledge allegiance to the condom and the promiscuous sex it allows."

      As far as the this-is-our-heritage argument goes: first, simply because something was accepted once is no reason it should be accepted now. Second, the argument against the Pledge is not based on any modern secular theory which you'd doubtless sneer at: it is a solid Constitutional argument, and the judges' decision was based on long-standing legal tests based upon a standard reading of the Constitution. Now, tell me, which is more important to America's heritage: a sentence penned by a Socialist then adopted and modified in that decade of enlightened tolerance, the 50s, or the Constitution?

    10. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by DEBEDb · · Score: 1

      had ancestors who were Mayan, Incan, and Aztec before the missionaries "taught them" about Christianity through plunder, torture, and murder.


      Were those the same Mayans whose religion
      demanded regular human sacrifices?

      --

      Considered harmful.
    11. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You believe the government should endorse the religion that was violently forced upon the native inhabitants of your country?

      Why?

      I mean, I saw some other stuff about how it's good to be 'decent god fearing folk', but as far as I can see the world is chock full of god fearing folk, but a damn sight fewer of them are actually decent. So it would appear that religions DON'T in fact help raise morality...

      So why do you support the govt backing it?

      I know why the GOVERNMENT would support it... religion being the opiate yadayadayada...

    12. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, but we'll never know for sure, because after the 'christians' finished their plundering, torturing and murdering, they also got to write the history books.

      (xians in speech marks because I don't want to offend the nice polite sort of xian who wouldn't harm a fly... I know rape, torture and murder aren't REALLY xian ideals...)

    13. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the government should promote the majority culture. You don't.

      And what happens to those people for whom this "promotion" doesn't "take". Off to the death camps, I suppose?

    14. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the government should promote the majority culture. You don't.

      And, given that the majority aren't very bright, really, should we be using that as a basis for future society? The founding fathers hardly cared about "the majority consensus". They created correct, sensible and a just basis for a society without once thinking "what would those people who watch 'Friends' like to see?".

      Perhaps people with an IQ over a certain level should be exempt from this "promotion".

      Face it, it's not going to work on such people anyway. Making me say, "under god", every day hasn't made me wake up one day believing in magic pixies, yet!

    15. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still like it, and am sorry to see it go

      Why? What possible good did it do for anyone? It's *not* going to convert anyone, quite the opposite in fact. I know I thought "stupid christians messing with our laws" every time I was forced to say it.

    16. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were those the same Mayans whose religion
      demanded regular human sacrifices?


      Yes, much like christianity, the religion whose god demands not only human sacrifice but also the occasional ethnic cleansing.

      Try reading your bible ...

    17. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      I believe the government should promote the majority culture. You don't.

      I do not believe that a majority culture needs promotion or protection. It is those people who are in the minority that need that protection. It is the atheists, Jews, and Buddhists that are facing the uphill battle in our society, not the Catholics, Methodists, and Baptists.

      Our founding fathers recognized that and it is the reason why the ruling went the way that it did in this case.

      However, there'd been a silent understanding all these years that let it stay, because it served the needs of the populace, and they liked it.

      I was not in on that "silent understanding" and always found the PoA recital in the morning to be offensive both in it's Nazi-like forced nature to the reference to God. And there is something wrong when little children are forced to say the Pledge of Allegiance long before they ever know what the words "pledge" and "allegiance" mean.

    18. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by DEBEDb · · Score: 1
      Perhaps, but we'll never know for sure, because after the 'christians' finished their plundering, torturing and murdering, they also got to write the history books.


      Look, I don't particularly like the whole
      christian missionary thing, but you are
      wrong here.


      Many of the mayan ruins have been excavated,
      and artefacts removed. Everything points to
      the sacrifices. In fact, they sort of liked
      christianity because of its one-time sacrifice
      thing - much more effective than having
      to fight wars all the time to get prisoners
      to sacrifice.


      Well, forget even the ruins. The Conquista
      did not happen that long ago for the christians
      to completely rewrite the history. Some
      were in contact with the indians and did
      just honestly record what they saw, even if
      biased necessarily by their completely
      different mentality.

      --

      Considered harmful.
    19. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there any proof either way? I mean, do you have a link to proof, for example?

      It's a pretty obvious fact that the survivor gets to write history, and I don't see a lot of Aztecs around telling their side of the story.
      Perhaps ruins HAVE been investigated and found to point to human sacrifce - but perhaps those investigations were by more xians? It wouldn't be the first time someone jumped to a conclusion to support their own history.

    20. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by DEBEDb · · Score: 1

      Mayan people are still around (e.g., Guatemala).

      I can link to any number of sources, but
      you will of course say they are all written
      by the victors. Why not look yourself,
      you know which sources you'll trust.

      --

      Considered harmful.
    21. Re:This Is Why We Are Angry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can link to any number of sources, but
      you will of course say they are all written
      by the victors.


      Good point - I actually didn't even consider that when I asked for a link... heh. I suppose I would believe it if I could see that the Aztec study/investigation had nothing to do with xians.
      Not that xians are all liars, it's just that in a case like this, I couldn't really expect them not to stick together...

  182. flag fetish is new too.... for the age of the USA by johnpaul191 · · Score: 2

    all those paintings (and Mel Gibson movies!) of revolutionary soldiers fighting with the Stars & Stripes in hand is kind of untrue. During the revolution a military band of American soldiers was much more likely to fly the flag of their State or Militia group.

    supposedly the major motivating factor to have a flag representing all of the states was for ships entering the harbors of foreign ports. there was something about this on Discovery Channel or somehting a week ago, and they traced back to where the obsession with the U.S. flag came from.... but i forget.... bleep bleep sorry!
    from what i remember it started about a hundred years ago, but i really am not remembering. maybe i had to go check on food.

  183. Devil's Advocate by Jim+the+Anti-Bob · · Score: 1

    The first has an undeniable aspect of coersion

    What about school uniforms?

    ;)

    1. Re:Devil's Advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about 'em ? The Constitution has something to say about forcing kids (or anyone) into a religion - it doesn't say anything about laws to create a monoculture, and enforce conformity. Congress can coerce that all they want (even though school uniforms are stupid !)

    2. Re:Devil's Advocate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if the school uniform includes crucifix.

    3. Re:Devil's Advocate by Arker · · Score: 2

      Where does the Constitution give Congress power to be involved in education, period?

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    4. Re:Devil's Advocate by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      Where does the Constitution give Congress power to be involved in education, period?

      It doesn't really. Thus the SC's recent ruling that school vouchers are not unconstitutional.

  184. The meaning of "God" by rbofh · · Score: 1

    I would argue that the usage of the term "God" in U.S. currency and within the pledge refers to a system of morals and fairness more than it does the religious aspect. "God" can interpreted as a generic term, somewhat like "Acme" except refering to Greek, Roman, Norsk, and Judeo-Christian mythological figures (among others).

    I don't disagree with its use in the pledge, acting as a reminder that this country is about more than "enhancing shareholder value."

    1. Re:The meaning of "God" by kst · · Score: 1
      > I would argue that the usage of the term "God" in U.S. currency and within the pledge refers to
      > a system of morals and fairness more than it does the religious aspect.


      I'm sorry, but that's nonsense. The word "God", especially capitalized, refers to the personal supreme being of the Jewish, Christian, and perhaps Muslim religions. Or it can refer to a less specific supreme being, but it's absurd to suggest that it doesn't refer to some supreme being.

      Take a look at what President Eisenhower said when he signed the act in 1954:

      From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our Nation and our people to the Almighty.

    2. Re:The meaning of "God" by rbofh · · Score: 1

      It's all in the interpretation.

      It could be "One Nation, Under Bugs Bunny(TM)" instead of "Under God," for all I care. Both are equally imaginary (imho), except Bugs generally has a better sense of humor (as some of the worst parts of the Old Testament suggest :-).

      We can speak of God in the hypothetical. For example, when I say "damn it!" I actually mean "if there were I god, I would have him/her/it damn this particular person/place/object!" But that's so much extra verbiage... and I can't normally think that straight after dropping something heavy on my big toe.

      Likewise, it would take some pretty fine print to fit "in fairness of government and proper treatment of individuals and preservation of freedoms and destruction of Micro$oft (erm, sorry... scratch that last one :-) do we trust." ...on the dollar bill, if you catch my drift.

      But yes, you're right. I'm well aware that cap 'g' means the "supreme being." I was being silly, and I apologize. But this whole thing is a little wacky, don't you agree? What judge in his right mind...?

  185. Happy Medium: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not just lopp off the "Under God" part. I am a republican and for the most part, I am a conservative... On the other hand, I am also very autonomous, especially when it comes to "religion"... As much as CA usually pisses me off with its never-ending spew of liberal malarke, I have to say that I agree with the court's decision.

    The Pledge as it currently stands IS unconstitutional - Period.

  186. Re:Simmer down QWZX by M-G · · Score: 2

    The "flag" is representative of the principles of the US, liberty and justice.

    Which is what makes it all the more ironic that "under God" was forced upon us....

  187. As an athiest, I disagree. by brad.hill · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As much as I agree in spirit (ha ha) with the ruling, I am pretty disappointed by it.


    Why? Because it throws gasoline on the fire of the paranoid delusions of many Christians in this country that they are somehow a persecuted minority squaring off with an evil govenrment committed to state-enforced atheism.


    The Pledge of Allegiance has such enormous emotional and social weight behind it, especially post 9/11, that it makes a perfect rallying point for "the lengths to which the atheists will go." This decision is just begging for a major political backlash and reeastablishment of the Christian Right's morality in our national political dialogue.


    It will contribute to the alienation of atheists and other non-Christians as "unpatriotic" in a time when that equates to "terrorist enemy" and constitutional protections are weaker than they have been in 60 years.


    ARRRGH. What HORRIBLE timing.

    1. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      I think that the timing was superb. As I see right-wing zealots chipping away at the Constitution post 9/11, I find it reassuring that the courts are unwilling to turn a blind eye to justice in the name of patriotism. If it inflames a few delusional Christians, so be it.

    2. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's too bad that your problem with the ruling stems from fear of its practical political repercussions, not from decision itself (which is absolutely correct).

      We athiests very rarely win in this country. Not since 1776 have we had a major victory.

      And judging from the reaction to this decision, I can't imagine today's politicians would ever have passed a bill of rights involving a government ban on endorsing religion.

    3. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by bitrott · · Score: 1

      Grow some cajones man! This is hardly superficial 'extremism'. If there's a 'war' being raged out there for the minds of people then I'm on the side of rationalism and logic, not superstition and mysticism. Certainly those things make for good fodder for movies and horror books, but they make for lousy politics. Little things like this go a long way toward educating people about the inanity the Christian Right wants us to embrace. They'll get sick of the Pat Robertsons faster than the Carl Sagans in the long run.

    4. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I believe we (those who agree with this ruling in spirit) have much more to worry about now. Post 9/11 here in the US is getting worse.

    5. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      Why? Because it throws gasoline on the fire of the paranoid delusions of many Christians in this country that they are somehow a persecuted minority squaring off with an evil govenrment committed to state-enforced atheism.

      You're right -- this is delusional. Just because they can't use the power of the State to enforce and promote their beliefs, they think they're being persecuted. Riiiiight. I suppose they won't complain about, say, the Taliban, then, since they were using the power of the state to enforce and promote their religious beliefs.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    6. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by timeOday · · Score: 1
      The only ones "enforcing" their beliefs here are the atheists. The girl was NEVER forced to recite the two offending words, or any other part of the pledge. Her parents are simply using her to silence others with whom they disagree.

      If "freedom of not hearing" overrules "freedom of speech," there will be no freedom of speech.

    7. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Um, no. Why force a young girl to defend her decision not to say the pledge to her fellow students and possibly the teacher as well? Do you not remember what a pressure cooker of peer pressure school is for kids?

    8. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by fmaxwell · · Score: 2

      If "freedom of not hearing" overrules "freedom of speech," there will be no freedom of speech.

      You are mistaking "free speech" for government-sponsored speech. While I have a personal right to state that a belief in God is silly superstition, I don't think you would be trumpeting my rights to free speech if I was a public school teacher being paid with your tax dollars while I said that to a classroom full of kids that included yours.

    9. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I do. I defended my position as &ltasbestos on&gt a creationist in front of my teacher and my whole biology class in high school. They were teaching evolution, I thought it was wrong, so I put my evidence together, and we had a debate. And I think it was a good learning experience for everybody.

      Heaven forbid anybody have to stand up and defend what they believe. In a controlled, safe environment, it can be very healthy. And even if it's not, she's going to have to stand up for herself at some point.

    10. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

      The only ones "enforcing" their beliefs here are the atheists.

      That's just wrong, and for several reasons. Firstly, "the atheists" are not making anyone do anything, this court case is about not endorsing a religion.

      Second, you refer to "the atheists" like they are some organized group, but that's not the case.

      Maybe if this case gets overturned, a Muslim will then sue to change the Pledge to "one Nation, under Allah." We'll see the Bible thumpers squeak, then, I imagine.

      --
      Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    11. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by n-baxley · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ... the paranoid delusions of many Christians in this country that they are somehow a persecuted minority squaring off with an evil govenrment committed to state-enforced atheism.

      First off, I don't think /.ers should point and laugh at paranoid delusionists. Second, it seems to me very easy to make the argument that there is definetly a feeling of state-enforced agnosticism. This legal judegment is a perfect example of that. Third, why do you expect religious people who feel the pledge should not be changed to stand back and not fight over this. You can't say on one hand "We don't like this and we won't stop until it's changed because it's our right to gripe!" and with the other hand tell those "crazy Christians" that they have to shut up and take it. Religious people have just as much right to fight for what they believe in as do the atheists.

    12. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Heaven forbid anybody have to stand up and defend what they believe.

      I don't think you can strongly belive in something unless you can defend it in a rational conversation, but why thrust that burden on a child? Especially since a conversation between an athiest leaning child and a group of bible thumping kids will be anything but rational? Even more true when you throw in the burst of "patriotism" following 9/11. So not only is little John going be be called a satan worshiper for not saying the pledge, but a terrorist as well.

      As a 20 something guy I can stand up to bible thumpers and tell them to fuck off if they try to give me shit for not beliving in god. But anybody who wants to throw that burden on a 7 or 8 or 11 year old also needs to fuck off. :)

      I'm all for rational debates, but its hard enough to get adults to be rational about religion, much less little kids.

    13. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have states like Iran and parties like the Taliban if they want to enforce religious doctrine. I say if they get too out of hand, we do what the founding fathers recommended...revolt. Thank god(tm) that atheists can carry guns too ;-)

    14. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, not saying the pledge does expose a kid to taunting, teasing, etc. But so does gym class, lunch, recess, having a funny name, etc. Should all of these things be ruled unconstitutional?

    15. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Dalcius · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between a rule that requires kids to say the allegiance, and going out to recess.

      I'm not advocating that we try and "protect our little babies," but some things are just rediculous. Forcing someone to say something they don't believe in is unamerican in my book.

      --
      ~Dalcius
      Rome wasn't burnt in a day.
    16. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      But all of those things (cept for the funny name) are unforutnate neccesities in going to school. Getting up and saying the pledge is not.

    17. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "delusional Christians"

      As opposed to sane, factually correct Christians? Or can you believe in guy-in-the-sky nonsense, without a scrap of proof (other than some cheesy book which daddy believes in) and still be considered rational?

    18. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by TheKey · · Score: 1

      Ditto. One of the employees in my building (near a friend who told me the story) got extremely angry, and kept saying, "Not after 9/11. They're taking away all our rights." Of course, they're not taking away any rights, and the guy was crazy. Pretty much me and my friend were the only ones that agreed with the ruling.

      Also of note, they kept saying, "The President will fix this. He'll over rule it!"

      --
      My Journal - 1,337 fans and countin
    19. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by inkfox · · Score: 2
      As much as I agree in spirit (ha ha) with the ruling, I am pretty disappointed by it.

      Why? Because it throws gasoline on the fire of the paranoid delusions of many Christians in this country that they are somehow a persecuted minority squaring off with an evil govenrment committed to state-enforced atheism.

      I don't know how many detentions and how much ridicule I suffered in school for refusing to say that part of the pledge, with the teacher keeping a watchful eye, ready to pounce when I wouldn't say it.

      Word got back to other parents, which made school functions very difficult for my parents, and which got me punished repeatedly at home. Later, word got to my parents' church through students talking.

      I don't give a rat's ass about fueling Christians' paranoid delusions when there are likely other kids being persecuted for real over their (non-)religious convictions.

      --
      Says the RIAA: When you EQ, you're stealing bass!
    20. Re:As an athiest, I disagree. by brad.hill · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I do not think that being a Christian is, by itself, any sign of being crazy or irrational.


      I do think that many groups thrive on creating feelings of persecution and minority status, as if we were somehow in the first century, not a modern state that has EXPLICIT PROTECTION for their (and everyone's) religous practice and in which they (Christians in general) constitute a large and politically powerful majority. Repeat after me: This decision is not a threat to Christianity. This decision does not force you to say you don't believe in God. It just says you can't be forced or coerced to say that you do.


      The "enforced agnosticism" you talk about is only in the functions of government and what it requires of its citizens. This is a distinction that many, unfortunately, fail to make, and actually is a good thing for religion.


      The seperation of church and state protects both ways. I think that only someone ignorant or delusional would actually WANT our political system, with all it's day-to-day vaguaries, corruption, etc., to be dictating their religious practice to them.


      A sensible Christian, as much as a sensible atheist, should want the coercive power of the state to be kept well away from matters of their heart, conscience and soul.

  188. Full Text of Supreme Court's Overturning Verdict by gdyas · · Score: 2

    "It is unconstitutional for the government to promote an establishment of religion. Except when we really want to."

    Sure, it sounds like a joke now. Wait a year.

    --

    The only tool you've got against psychosis is experience.

  189. Yet another stupid headline by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

    The CNN story suggests that forcing people to recite it is unconstitutional. The actual pledge is not uncosnitutional itself.

    Tom

    --
    Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  190. No one can interpret the Constitution correctly by Sneaky_Jesus · · Score: 1

    The seperation of church and state has nothing to do with making sure any reference to any deity is erased or banned from our government. The seperation of church and state however is to make sure the government doesn't create a religion and make everyone in the country follow it. It also means the government cannot pick a religion, let's say Buddhism, and make everyone be a Buddhist. People's priorities are messed up. They are worried about a litte addition to the pledge of allegiance while out government is busy nuking out rights with laws that "protect" us from all of the bad bad men in the world.

    --
    BONESAW IS READY!/Randy Savage
  191. man are you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    frickin anal. what a fucking loser

    1. Re:man are you by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      I am not anal. I simply have conviction. I hold my values to a very high level. Unlike most of those claiming to be of the Christian faith, I follow through with my values in my every day life.
      I don't just claim to have some belief only to ignore that belief on a daily basis because it is inconveinient or unpopular.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  192. MSNBC by dalutong · · Score: 1

    I was watching some MSNBC show and the person who was against the ruling (some crazy lady -- and the show's host too -- which i think is unfair) was saying that she doubted highly that people suffered any sort of social criticism because they don't want to say the pledge... esp the under god part. or not saying it at all BECAUSE of the under god part i guess is more accurate..

    but anway, i've certainly felt animosity because i don't say it (at all. i used to say it minus the under god part till i realized that i needed to protest the state trying to instill some belief into my mind).

    especially after 9/11 (which i think is pathetic. very few people gave a shit about god before 9/11.. then somehow now he's "back." what crap. if you didn't need him before you don't need him now. and i think, personally, that the belief in a higher being is largely disempowering for the majority of people. even my girlfriend believes that "when good things happen to me, i thank god, when bad things happen, i blame myself." what kind of attitude is that? maybe during the calvinist movement people felt empowered by a higher being determining their fate, but now i just see a bunch of teenages who feel like they "weren't chosen" and therefore might as well go off, do drugs, sleep around, become mysogynists (sp), and still somehow claim that they believe jesus "saved us all.")

    please. i think that "under god" should be gone. just like it was in 1953. and "in god we trust." gone. "god bless america" sung my government sponsored singers or officials. gone.

    let us stick to our constitution. but in government, religion -- of any sort -- should play no part. leave that at home.

    --

    What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
  193. In God We Trust. All others pay cash. by sjbe · · Score: 3

    Sums it up pretty well I think...

  194. and in security.. by unixwin · · Score: 1

    In God we trust... others we firewall
    so now we should firewall EVERYTHING??

    --
    -- everyones not everybody and neither is everybody like everyone.
  195. INTERESTING FACT... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you realize that as of last year, about 6 senators have ever been defeated, but 9 died in office? Senators get re-elected endlessly (as long as they run.)

    That's why it's not surprising there's people like Sen. Byrd, D-West Virginia, who was around when he voted for the UNDER GOD addition, who are still in Congress and who support it still.

    What chance senators who voted to add UNDER GOD will admit to being wrong?

    Read NEW ARTCILE just 10 mins old on CNN:

    http://www.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/06/26/senate .r esolution.pledge/index.html

    Thank GOD for no subscriptions! Err..

  196. An addendum perhaps? by sterno · · Score: 1

    I like my phrasing as it implies that somehow the government would be monitoring your thoughts. So, the new line:

    ... for all except people who the government thinks might be a terrorist or anybody who has ever considered the possibility of being a terrorist at any point

    yah?

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:An addendum perhaps? by Alsee · · Score: 2

      monitoring your thoughts

      Ahh. I missed the implied mind reading, chuckle.

      I was just rearranging it to remove the suggestion that they had actually considered being a terrorist. I've had too many debates with too many people who defend bad laws because they fixate on the notion that it will only affect "bad people".

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  197. As an athiest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Many atheists do not acknowledge a higher being (as you stated) and so being forced to recite an incantation that acknowledges a higher being ("one Nation, under God") goes against that in a rather severe way.

    As an athiest, let me say that's exactly it. I am not offended by the idea of God. "God" as a concept and religion plays a significant historical and cultural role in America's (and the world's) history.

    However, I certainly resented as a kid having to swear my allegance to a nation which is "under God"-- Some people believe that god exists, but I sure as shit don't.

    I remember clearly being very uncomfortable with having to stand up in 7th grade and say those words, especially because I had also been taught that we lived in a country that would never compel people to believe in any particular religion.

    For this reason, I also feel the national motto (changed from "e pluribus unum" to "in god we trust") and the practice of saying "so help me god" when taking an oath are also inappropriate.

  198. Speaking as an athiest by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    I like to think I'd be fighting with you against the state long before they came for your children.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  199. religion != morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I, for one, am getting sick of hearing people equating religion to morality. They are not one and the same. Look at the world today. Religion is the cause of most of the problems you will see. There is no real evidence to support any of it, and I believe the world will be a better place when it is gone.

    1. Re:religion != morality by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      The other cause is differences in race. Therefore, if we choose a race and eliminate all other (thereby eliminating race as an issue), we can fix that problem.

      Oh wait, that was the Holocaust.

  200. The pledge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The pledge never belonged in school. It is a bad thing to put blind faith in any government. That is why the entire holocaust happenend. No one questioned the government being right or wrong they just followed. No the pledge isn't that bad or anything but kids don't really understand what there saying. Dan Mayer

  201. Also kinda strange by mplex · · Score: 1

    You mention that you don't even know any other athiests. It happens that everyone in my house is one, 7 in all including me (2 apts). It's a very nice position to be in since we get to discuss the subject quite often.

  202. Troll? Are you on drugs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who is the moron that modded the parent "Troll"? The parent post is funny. It was meant to be funny. It even included a little winking smiley face so that even dumb-asses could understand it was a joke. Guess some dumb-asses are dumber than anyone could have guessed.

  203. Re:In God We Trust. All others pay cash. by sterno · · Score: 1

    In God We Trust. All others pay by credit until they are so obscenely in debt that they can only just barely pay their minimum balances every month. Then take a second mortgage out on your house to pay off some of the balances so that you can buy more stuff on credit.

    Eh, maybe your phrase is better :)

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  204. History Lesson by Char+Lander · · Score: 2, Informative

    Okay just so everyone knows.

    The original pledge as in, the one pledge went just like the one we recite today just without the 'under God' part.

    One Nation, Indivisible, with liberty.... blah blah blah

    It wasn't until I wanna say 1954 during Dwight D. Eisenhower's run as president that it changed. He legislated a bill to add the words 'Under God' after the words 'One Nation'.

    One cause of this was the McCarthy Communism search and destroy action that was taking place. Everyone was all up in arms about communists and it was during this time that Dwight changed our pledge.

    I have to say that I totally support the seperation of church and state. We cannot have a government that has over-tones of God written in it. It is the beauty of our system. Religous Freedom. We can choose to ignore or accept the existence of a diety. We can worship whomever we want. That is why America, the USA, has been called the melting pot of society. We have everything here. I am for it completely. After all I am about tradition too.

    --
    ~Char Lander
    Brothers and sisters I have none, but this mans father is my fathers son
  205. so what about "natural law" by djmab · · Score: 1

    It's a little ridiculous that this bland kind of rhetoric is construed as a violation of "separation of church and state"

    why? because the capitalism, and most of our ideas about what constitutes a constitutional democracy were founded on a basis in "natural law".

    Now, I'm not saying these men were strict believers in a Judeo-Christian version God. In many cases they were, in some cases they were merely deists. But...they did hold a firm belief that this version of democracy would not survive if the people under it did not maintain that belief in a creator who endows all human with these "inalienable rights".

    Does this constitute a violation of church and state? No, and certainly not in the constitutional framer's mind's either. The separation of church and state is to prevent religious istitutions from having unfair dominance over government. NOT to neuterize our politics or to de-religionize political discourse. Again, capitalism, natural law, and ideas about constitutional democracy were devoloped with the deist/theistic mindset. If you want to be an atheist that's fine, it's certainly allowed for in our version of democracy but it will preclude much of any cohesive views on natural law. Atheists are better off being marxists or nihlists so go sulk somewhere besides America...

  206. brief historical note by RestiffBard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the pledge was invented in the 1890s I believe. Originally it did not contain the "under god" part. that was added at the request of the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic Fraternal Organization around the 1950s. Before some of you fly off the handle might I suggest reading up on this. One excellent source (you don't even have to read) is www.th-jefferson.org I'm not even going to rant at this point beyond saying that its nice to see that for once we're getting back to the actual constitution as opposed to these phony "traditions". Oaths and pledges have never been a tradition in a country founded by men who detested the very idea of an oath or pledge of allegiance. Its refreshing that in this time when so many of our rights are in jeopardy and the constitution is being contorted to meet the needs of national security that there is a moment of sanity. Ok, so its a little ranty.

    --
    - /* dead coders leave no comments */
  207. CNN QUICK VOTE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vote on CNN.COM:
    Created: Wed Jun 26 14:47:02 EDT 2002
    Do you agree that the Pledge of Allegiance is an unconstitutional endorsement of religion?
    Yes 23% 25540 votes
    No 77% 83706 votes
    Total: 109,246 votes

    This QuickVote is not scientific and reflects the opinions of only those Internet users who have chosen to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of Internet users in general, nor the public as a whole. The QuickVote sponsor is not responsible for content, functionality or the opinions expressed therein.

  208. Ok SO I am a troll by termite666 · · Score: 1

    I pledge allignment to the United Snakes of a Merry cow ,and to the repubilcans for which they scam ,One play station under mud and blah blah blah

    1. Re:Ok SO I am a troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get it right:

      I plead alignment, to the flakes, of the untitled snakes of a merry cow. And to the republicans, for which they scam, one nacho, underpants, with licorice and jugs of wine for owls.

      -Binky, Life in Hell

  209. You, sir, are full of sh*t by Aexia · · Score: 2

    Its the same thing with God. They talk about divine intervention - aka God.

    You've obviously never even looked at the constitution. Go read it yourself.

    There is no mention divine intervention. There is no mention of a creator. There is no mention of God.

    There are only two times religion is even mentioned is to state no religious test can be mandated for office and no law respecting the establishment of religion can be made.

    1. Re:You, sir, are full of sh*t by sg3000 · · Score: 2
      Wrong.

      Done in convention by the unanimous consent of the states present the seventeenth day of September in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty seven and of the independence of the United States of America the twelfth

      Thank, you. Please, post a retraction.


      Hardly a need for a retraction. Spelling out the meaning of anno Domini is hardly an endorsement of a state-sponsored religion, so the essence of Aexia's comment is correct. I guess our Founding Fathers could have changed our method of writing years in the Western World to remove mentioning Jesus, but they had a big enough task in creating a new government. A la The Simpsons: "Not only are the trains running on time. They're running on metric time!"

      Getting the country to agree to a new government is hard, but it would be close to impossible if you had to convince everyone, "No, it's not 1787! It's Year 11."
      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    2. Re:You, sir, are full of sh*t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Danny boy you are just getting plain lazy. You shouldn't troll when you are not up to it. I suggest another login to use when you are on the "meds"

  210. the pledge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it still right to pledge allegiance to your fatherland, when it ask/force you to do it in a unconstitutional way ?

  211. The Pledge by InnovativeCX · · Score: 1

    Excerpt from CNN. Pledge of Allegiance ruled unconstitutional June 26, 2002 Posted: 3:04 PM EDT (1904 GMT) --- SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) -- For the first time ever, a federal appeals court declared the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional Wednesday because of the words "under God" added by Congress in 1954. -- This offends me as a Christian, but putting that aside, it's just stupid! This is a pledge that has been recited in schools everywhere for decades. It is simply a pledge of loyalty to our nation and what it stands for. While our country was founded upon Christian principles, our forefathers thought it best to separate the Church from the State based on the persecution separatists faced in Great Britain. Even if you do not subscibe to Judeo-Christian theology, "Under God" could mean anything you want it to--you could even let it mean what it means to just about everybody else, the idea of a greater power, or even the power of good. May the force be with you. At the moment, I'm looking at the back of a $20 bill. Above the picture of White House, the words "IN GOD WE TRUST" appear. Does this mean that my money should no longer be legal because it is offensive to society? Should I not be able to use it because of someone's personal convictions? Wouldn't it just be much easier to implant a biochip encoded with my credit card number in my right hand or forehead, offending no one (purely a joke)? Or should I be able to practice religious freedom, whether that be in a mono, poly, or a-theistic faith?

  212. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1, Troll

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  213. Actually... by schon · · Score: 1

    US currency says "In God We Trust". Now, if that means you don't believe in God, it simply translated to, "Trust No One"

    Actually, if you have the mind-ray jamming sunglasses, you'd see that it actually says "This is your god" :o)

  214. It's about damn time. by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 2

    Now all they have to do is go and remove "In God We Trust" from all the money, and what not.

    Ohio's state motto is "With God all things are possible" and this motto was upheld in a case from a few years ago as it "didn't endorse a specific religion." This was a bad ruling, in my opinion, because it's pretty obvious that it's NOT endorsing atheism, pantheism, paganism, hinduism, satanism, etc.

    It's pretty clearly a nod to a (almost certainly Judeo-Christian) monotheistic deity who commonly goes by the name God (alias YHWH, alias Jehovah, the Almighty, the Father, etc.) Blech. You'd have to be pretty shortsighted to think that "With God all things are possible" is completely unbiased with regard to religious affiliation!

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    1. Re:It's about damn time. by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      Tobacco is not addictive.
      Enron executives did not know about accounting fraud.
      Did Worldcom come up with an excuse yet?

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  215. OT: Jews and beliefs about Hell by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 2

    Whenever you make a statement about what Jews believe, you're bound to be wrong, because you'll find some group of Jews who do believe the opposite.

    Look up "Gehenna." It's a nasty place that (some) Jews believe the deceased go to for a period of time (up to a month; more precisely, up to the length of the period of shloshim) to be punished for sins and/or purified.

    Gehenna is named for a valley near Jerusalem where the Cananites used to supposedly perform human sacrifice of children to Baal.

    --
    Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
    www.fogbound.net
    1. Re:OT: Jews and beliefs about Hell by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      Whenever you make a statement about what Jews believe, you're bound to be wrong, because you'll find some group of Jews who do believe the opposite.
      That's true... A friend of mine says that the arabs are stupid; otherwise, they'd make peace with the jews, and within a month, they would have all killed each-other...
    2. Re:OT: Jews and beliefs about Hell by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 2

      Ah yes, as they've done so dramatically in places where there is peace, like Europe and the United States.

      Hardly a day goes by without another group of Jews slaughtering their brethren.

      [!?]

      --
      Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
      www.fogbound.net
  216. Here goes... by kaoshin · · Score: 2, Funny

    I pledge alliegance to the flag
    Of the united states of capitalism
    Who screw the public
    As much as they can
    One nation
    Under God
    Except in school
    It's impermissible
    For great justice

    1. Re:Here goes... by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      Damn, ran out of mod-points or i would have got you up.

      & My ass cheeks - Standing together for peace and justice :)

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  217. Should change it to.... by phoem · · Score: 1

    ......one nation, under PHOEM, with liberty and justice for all.

    :-)

  218. I have one question. by Spunk · · Score: 2

    How is this on-topic for Slashdot?

    I'm not denying it's worthy of discussion, but why here? It's just not "News for Nerds," it's of a more general sort.

    1. Re:I have one question. by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      Well, judging by the speed at which comments are being added to this topic, one would think that this is "Stuff that matters", anyway.

    2. Re:I have one question. by rockwalrus · · Score: 1

      There aren't nerds that live in the United States? Ones that maybe even go into the Big Place Outside The Apartment With The Really Bright Yellow Light on occasion? That might even have managed to reproduce somehow and have kids that go to public schools?

      --


      Rockwalrus

      The sleep of reason produces monsters -- Francisco Goya
  219. Crack addicts in government by pauldy · · Score: 1

    Is this what happens when we place intellect over common sense. Take about cutting off your nose to spite your face. This panel to make such a ruling is nonsense. Participation is not mandatory and the ability to make that choice is what makes this country great. To deny the majority their rights based of ones opinion of its constitutionality is in itself unconstitutional. At the least the panel here should really consider the ethics and consequences of their decision. Even our currency reads in god we trust so how this argument holds water with anyone is beyond me and we as Americans better stand up now or all the minority notches will run everything for fear of political whiplash like this from people who obviously are looking for nothing more than to make a name for themselves.

  220. Actually, it probably will be struck down... by FoxND001 · · Score: 1

    Considering that the Suprime Court itself starts all it's session with the phrase "God save the United States and this Honorable Court!", I would say that the odds of this being struck down by the suprime court are pretty high indeed.

    This is, of course, just my opinion...

    --
    Alex Aguila
    1. Re:Actually, it probably will be struck down... by FoxND001 · · Score: 1

      and if only I could learn to use spell check more often.... *sigh*

      Too many servers.... too little sleep......

      --
      Alex Aguila
    2. Re:Actually, it probably will be struck down... by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      Considering that the Suprime Court itself starts all it's session with the phrase "God save the United States and this Honorable Court!", I would say that the odds of this being struck down by the suprime court are pretty high indeed.

      The issue there would be standing. The only people with standing to object would be the supreme court justices theselves. However the Supremes did rule that a certain judge is not allowed to display the ten commandments. Having seen the item in question I think it should have been carried on grounds of taste alone though, the thing looked like someone made it in their backyard out of paper mache, spray painted it poorly and sold it to the gulible through late night infomertials.

      The point about the pledge is that there is exactly the type of overt coertion that the court has struck down in previous prayer cases.

      However since the initial rulling is simply that the lower court cannot throw the case out on de minimis grounds it is clearly not going to be going to the supreme court for quite a while. The supremes do not get involved until a question is 'ripe' that is usually not until all the lower court processes have been completed. The appeals court rulling will make it very difficult for the lower court to do any

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  221. This is what the USSC will rule by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They will smack down the 9th circuit ruling, and add, that people should not be forced to say the pledge of the allegiance.

  222. The Senate shows their general IQ. by 2boundless · · Score: 1

    I was certain that our elected representatives are out of touch - I just didn't know how far. This decision has been a long time coming and is drop-dead rational - and the Senate calls it 'Stupid'? I'm amazed and appalled all over again. I am becoming more of a zealous godless American every day...

    1. Re:The Senate shows their general IQ. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Senate isn't necessarily showing that they're stupid. It shows that they're the willing whores of their stupid constituants.

  223. Declaration of Independence by LowellPorter · · Score: 1

    I guess reading the Declaration of Independence is unconstitutional too since it has references to God in it.
    Here's the first part of it:
    When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights

  224. my letter to my senators by macsox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    i'm in california -- but if anyone wants to use the verbiage:

    As someone who cares passionately about issues involving the separation of church and state, and a member of Americans United for Separation of Church and State (au.org), I was overjoyed to see that the 9th District Court today upheld the intentions of the Constitution in declaring the addition of 'under God' to the Pledge of Allegiance, a pledge many schools force children to say, as unconstitutional.

    My joy was quickly soured when I heard reports of the reactionary and nasty resolution passed by the Senate today, chastising the District Court which made the ruling.

    I don't know what your personal religious beliefs are, but I hope that you can recognize that making children declare that the United States is a nation under God is an infringement of their free exercise of religion if they are not religious, or do not believe in God. Such an infringement is inherently contrary to the letter and spirit of the First Amendment to the Constitution.

    I am incredibly thankful that there exist checks and balances within our government, so that wrongs perpetrated by one branch of the government can be righted by another. As a Democratic Senator in a time of a Republican administration, I am sure you see this value everyday. It was therefore doubly distressing that the resolution passed should have been personal argumentative as well as constitutionally indefensible.

    In these days of increasing governmental restriction of personal liberty at the hands of an Executive branch that dreams of a dictatorship, even the most minor victory against improper legislation and decisions should be resoundingly celebrated. That the Senate failed to celebrate this decision is saddening and a reflection that it is easier to go with the majority than to stand for what is right.

    Hoping you can convince me that I'm wrong,

    Yours, etc.

    1. Re:my letter to my senators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      He lives in the US because, like me, he believes it can be rescued from complete ASSHATS like you.

    2. Re:my letter to my senators by ScottForbes · · Score: 1
      I don't know what your personal religious beliefs are, but I hope that you can recognize that making children declare that the United States is a nation under God is an infringement of their free exercise of religion if they are not religious, or do not believe in God.

      Agreed, but what relevance does this have to the case at hand? This man filed suit not because his daughter was forced to declare anything, but because she had to hear the words "under God" as the other children recited them. At no point was the daughter compelled to recite, save perhaps by peer pressure; if the teacher had required her to recite the Pledge, then the man would have a stronger case and your argument would apply.

    3. Re:my letter to my senators by MisterBlister · · Score: 1
      I wish more people would speak out about the scary reaction Congress has had to this event!


      Not only do they NOT want to seperate church and state, they also seem to want to remove the checks & balances in place in our government. Let the Supreme Court handle it, Congressional fuckwits. Either way it ends up going its their job, NOT yours!

    4. Re:my letter to my senators by inc0gnito · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. The fact that they resoundingly stuck their noses where they didn't belong (by a vote of 99-0 no less) was made even worse by personal attacks on the judge who made the ruling. Not only are they unable to seperate church and state, but they are unable to seperate their personal feelings from a rational interpretation of the law.

      The executive and legistlative branches of the government are not meant to interpret existing laws. That's the judical branch's job. So how about the other branches focus their jobs for a change?

  225. Oh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, Of the many that signed the declaration of independence, everyone but Ben Franklin were Christian. (Ben Franklin being a well-known deist.

    1. Re:Oh? by Zen+Mastuh · · Score: 2

      Don't forget that our Founding Fathers ended up here as a result of their old government favoring a particular brand of religion. It was their intention to avoid a repeat.

      --
      "What is the sound of one belly slapping?"
  226. Jewish Lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The thing about Jews which is interesting is that they are like a super-organism, i.e. a column of army ants or a flight of killer bees. Individually any given Jew is probably obnoxious, but perhaps not as sinister as one would be led to believe given their group behavior. This is like a killer bee, or termite, or army ant. An isolated individual insect of these species may be annoying but harmless. Yet as a group these insects, like the Jews, constitute a real threat.

    The best defense is a good offense. It is no wonder that Hitler saw fit to exterminate the Jew. I'm sure Hitler bore no animosity against any single individual Jew, but he realized that like a hive of dangerous insects, Jews should be exterminated.

  227. This Story (-1 Redundant) by LinuxWhore · · Score: 1

    I don't see how this story fits into the realm of "News for Nerds". It's just the usual /. politcal pulpit story. WTF? I don't come to /. to read political spin. I come to read about computer/tech related stuff.

    --

    I am MuchTall
  228. English skills.... failing... by PierceLabs · · Score: 1

    Since the majority of Americans believe in a higher being, a person who states the pledge of allegience is pledging allegience to a country 'under God.' The pledge of allegience does not state that a person has to believe in God in any way. Clearly the moron who passed this failed english. "I pledge allegience to ..." and what follows is a description of what the person is pledging allegience to. DUH DUH DUH!

    1. Re:English skills.... failing... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2

      I suspect, the majority of first-graders also believe in a tooth fairy.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  229. Re:Not Pledge, But Act Of Congress Adding "Under G by DragonMagic · · Score: 2

    Only the Ninth Circuit Court (mostly western states) ruled it unConstitutional, and as such, there is a few months before it becomes effective, to allow room for the Supreme Court to hear an appeal by the States affected.

    --

    Human nature is the same everywhere; the modes only are different. -- Earl of Chesterfield
  230. Declaration of Independence! by encino · · Score: 1

    Everyone seems to be going on about how the "under God" part is a 1954 invention and that by getting rid of it, we're "going back to the Constitution." Doesn't the document that America is founded on, the Declaration of Independence, say that are liberty, our inalienable rights, are only ours because they are endowed by "our Creator?" God (whomever of whatever you take that to mean) is part of the founding document of our nation, and therefore should be reflected in the pledge of allegiance. Bad decision, 9th circuit court - looks like the Supreme Court will have to strike this one down like they have many other decisions coming out of this court...

    1. Re:Declaration of Independence! by chazzf · · Score: 2

      The Declaration of Independence really doesn't have an bearing on the matter. It was written in 1776, some thirteen years before the adoption of the current constitution. The Declaration and the Constitution were drawn up by different people. The Declaration has no legal standing. You'll notice there is no mention of God in the Constitution.

      ~Chazzf

      --
      No statement is true, not even this one.
    2. Re:Declaration of Independence! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I realize that the Declaration has no *legal* bearing, but I believe it should have *some* bearing on our nation given that it was the document that contains the reasons for having a free nation at all. The Constitution should be viewed through the lens of the Declaration of Independence. The Declaration is a vague statement regarding the nature of man, and what the basic fundamental rights of men are (life, liberty, etc). The Constitution's job as stated by the framers I might add, was to expound the *details* of what life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness should look like in detail. The two documents must not and should not be separated because the same batch of men were involved in both documents' formation. Who wrote the Decl? Jefferson. Who was instrumental in the first Constitutional amendments? Jefferson. Who was the Revolutionary War General and national leader at the time of the Declaration? Washington. Who presided over the Constitutional Convention? Washington. I could go on like that for all the framers such as Madison, etc, but I trust that you'll agree that it is incorrect to state that the Constitution and Declaration come from "different people" as you claimed previously. It just isn't so, and to further argue that they should be considered divorced from each other is completely contrary to the goals of the Framers, since they were the same people!

  231. OT: Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by AnalogBoy · · Score: 1

    That would be more appropriate. Then our currency would have a static value again. Then again, i am not an economist.. i have no idea what the consequences of going back to a gold standard would be, aside from there would be less money to go around.

    In reference to your sig.. Shouldnt the past tense of "shit" be "shat" ?

    :)

    1. Re:OT: Re:Please note that . . . Re:$$, too by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Well when we start mining asteroids we'll really start being able to raise the standard of living, lol.

  232. Re:On the author of the DoI by dr_darnoctigon · · Score: 1

    "No religious reading, instruction or exercise, shall be prescribed or practiced [in the elementary schools] inconsistent with the tenets of any religious sect or denomination." --Thomas Jefferson

  233. Big deal by eyeball · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was born Jewish, broght up athiest, then on my own began following the teachings of Buddha, and yet through all that, "one nation under God" and "in God we trust" never really bothered me.

    Would someone please explain, in plain cause-and-effect, end-results, bottom-line, what would happen if kids continued to say that? Can't parent's just tell their children "Well Billy, when you start school today you're going to say the Pledge of Allegiance, and part of it says 'under God,' because the people who wrote that believed something we don't, and they aren't wrong, and we aren't wrong, and..." blah blah blah..

    --

    _______
    2B1ASK1
    1. Re:Big deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would someone please explain, in plain cause-and-effect, end-results, bottom-line, what would happen if kids continued to say that? Can't parent's just tell their children "Well Billy, when you start school today you're going to say the Pledge of Allegiance, and part of it says 'under God,' because the people who wrote that believed something we don't, and they aren't wrong, and we aren't wrong, and..." blah blah blah..

      They shouldn't have to say that. The government by including "under god" in the pledge is endorsing a position on a fundimental religious question.

      This is expressly prohibited by the first amendment.

      And, an athiest would not say, incidentally, that "the people who wrote that...aren't wrong". They are in fact wrong from a legal standpoint, and from a factual standpoint. Our nation is, in fact, NOT "under God." God does not exist in actuality. It would be as correct to say "one nation, under Santa Clause".

    2. Re:Big deal by 1000baseFX · · Score: 0

      Your opinion bud.
      However, the facts are the facts, the founding fathers were "all" christians and "intended" us to follow suit!

    3. Re:Big deal by Serra · · Score: 1

      My grandmother was a Jehovah's Witness who taught me that idolatry worship was wrong and made a big deal out of the fact that I should never say the pledge of allegiance. However, my teacher also made a very big deal out of making all of the children in my class stand up and say it.

      I remember standing up and lip-syncing the pledge of alligiance every morning. It was a very big deal to me. I worried that my teacher would find out I wasn't actually saying the pledge. I worried that God would be angry that I wasn't exactly following his rules. The pledge should not be presented to school children who can not figure out whose authority is highest.

    4. Re:Big deal by sickman · · Score: 1

      They weren't christians as you know them.
      And if they intended us to follow suit, why
      is God left out of the Constitution? Not one
      mention of him, anywhere in it.... curious, don't you think, bud?

      As to them being all christians, they were mostly deists. Christians in a "God as a watchmaker" kind of way, not a "God is here watching us" kind of way.

      --
      Sickman's spinfusor catches Anonymous Coward by surprise.
    5. Re:Big deal by naasking · · Score: 1

      and they aren't wrong, and we aren't wrong

      One of you has to be wrong.

    6. Re:Big deal by freeweed · · Score: 2

      I worried that God would be angry that I wasn't exactly following his rules.

      I think you better have a talk with your grandmother, if this is the sort of nonsense she put in your head as a child.

      Yeesh, people think kids today have problems, imagine the fear of .. well pretty much anything (this IS God after all), just for something you said.

      Scary.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    7. Re:Big deal by macdaddy357 · · Score: 1

      I'm down with his grandma. You have to turn toward a symbol, put your hand on your heart, and swear an oath to that symbol. This is just as much idolatry as if that symbol was a golden calf. It should be noted that crucifixes, crosses, and portraits of Jesus, and statues of the saints could be considered idols as well. Some people even make an Idol of the bible, especially the King James Version.

      --
      How ya like dat?
    8. Re:Big deal by mt-biker · · Score: 1

      As a student of Dharma, you know that people should refrain from speaking untruths.

      Do you think it's a good idea to teach your child that it's okay to stand, with your hand over your heart (or whatever it is that you do - I'm not an American) and recite an oath/pledge, while actually pledging something else to yourself?

      I must admit that I also find the whole pledge rather creepy, and knowing the child that I was, I probably would have refused to say it. :)

      Today I believe that moral guidance is good, but not in such a heavy-handed way. Has the pledge helped? What is the result of every child having had to say this pledge daily? Are Americans better then Europeans?

      When I was a boy-scout, we originally had to swear to do our "duty to God". I believe this was changed at some point to doing "duty to my god", which I found more palatable. Such a simple change probably can't be made to the pledge, though.

  234. What sort of lesson is Newdow's daughter learning? by hyacinthus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now, I'm a sort of atheist-agnostic myself, certainly not a religious man. And I've always seethed over the way that "...under God..." was crammed into the Pledge of Allegiance during the 50's. So I wouldn't be too displeased to see it go, yet, all the same...

    I heard this story in a news item on NPR this afternoon, and a quote from the plaintiff Newdow, the man who filed suit because his daughter had to recite the Pledge in school, caught my attention: he claimed that it "hurt" (his word) his daughter to have to listen to those words. (Note: to _listen_ to them. Not to say them--as has been pointed out in this discussion, it has long been established that a child cannot be compelled to recite the Pledge.)

    What the f**k? I mean, this kid, all her life, is going to have to hear expressions of belief that she has been trained not to approve of. (Note, _trained_. She's a second-grader; she's not old enough to have a truly independent opinion on this or anything, except maybe whether she likes broccoli or not.) She's gonna see people wearing crucifixes (and Stars of David, and pentacles, and whatever), she's gonna read and hear and see people talking about God and Jesus and Allah _wherever she goes_. What kind of lesson is it for her to learn, that a federal court has decided that she doesn't even have to _hear_ something she doesn't like, or that her father doesn't like?

    I'm reminded of the imbroglio in San Diego a few years ago, when some atheist group or other tried to get the Mt. Soledad cross torn down. I could respect their arguments, and yet still think, "What a bunch of yahoos! It's a cross. There are lots of crosses around. Deal with it."

    It's one reason that, even though I don't believe in God, I often can't stand the company of some atheists; they walk through life with a giant chip on their shoulders, ready to jump down the throat of anyone who so much as whispers the G-word.

    hyacinthus.

  235. I don't believe this by gabbarsingh · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What the hell is wrong with you people?

    I'm an immigrant and I look at many things in USA and say "ahh! here is where they got it right". Pledge of Allegiance is such a thing. So it's got a politically 'incorrect' word in it, modify it or improve it or something. But don't simply abandon it as in dropping a hot cake. Patriotism is like a value that must be instilled like good values must be instilled in a child, not to make one blind with great pride but to learn to care for one's country and people. And some sentences as in 'I love you' or 'I miss you' reinforce good habits.

  236. FYI: a good discussion on this on another board by racketboynick · · Score: 1

    check this out
    http://litespeedcomputers.com/sx/cgi/ib3/ikon board . gi?s=3d19fc847395ffff;act=ST;f=9;t=4817

    good discussion -- no flames so far :-)

  237. Declaration Of Independence and The Pledge... by ellem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The DOI is really a rant about not wanting to be governed by a King who lives across an Ocean. It is in fact a Declaration Of Independence. So for all of you folks who are worried that its references to Divine this or that will render it Unconstitutional, stop worrying. In truth, it is mere a very nice thing that we have that has no power. It's like a family Heirloom.

    The Pledge Of Allegiance is, in fact, a pledge. It probably _is_ unconstitutional to make children recite a Pledge Of Allegiance to anything or anyone. Of course if Saddam Hussien were forcing the children of his counrty to recite a Pledge Of Allegiance we'd all be very forthright in our disdain for such heiniousness.

    Personally, I like the Pledge. I don't mind the God part; I simply replaced the phrase, or omitted it when I spoke it in the presense of Sister Mary Verylarge.

    Of course the Media (/. included) will sensationalize this story.

    If you want a story to sensationalize start talking about Flag Burning. Something every American should DO because we CAN. Nothing speaks of our Freedom more than the ability to BURN our FLAG.

    --
    This .sig is fake but accurate.
    1. Re:Declaration Of Independence and The Pledge... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course the Media (/. included)

      when did slashdot qualify as media?

  238. Irony at its finest! by rgriff59 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    So, the ones that belive in a 'Supreme Being' are supporting the 'under god' inclusion by arguing that the phrase doesn't mean that much, while the atheists insist that the phrase 'under god' has meaning so it should be removed.

    I don't care what side you want to take, that is something to think about.

  239. Separation of church and state? Bull by tuxedobob · · Score: 0, Troll

    Now, before anyone goes and claims that the phrase "separation of church and state" is "right there" in the constitution, perhaps a trip to the U.S. Consitution is in order. It doesn't even have the word "church" in it.

    Still insistent that we should have separation of church and state? Fine, then stop prosecuting the Catholic priests for molesting children, as that's a violation of the law, and priests are church officials. They should be separate, shouldn't they?

  240. Exactly by zoloto · · Score: 0, Troll

    I enjoy the crap you people spew from your mouths. "Seperation of church and state", "the forcing of beliefs on others by any faith".

    You people disgust me completely. The statement in the Constitution and it's AMendments don't say anything about seperation of church and state. It is regarding AND SPECIFICALLY stating that there is to be no "state"(not as on one of the States) sponsored religion. But freedom to chose what you will, and freedom from the opression that our forbearer fought against in Europe, aisa and throughout the world.

    This talk about removeing God from our country is like wecoming the Assyrians into our country and letting them ravage us as they did back then.

    For years, people and liberal monkeys were screaming to take God out of our public, out of our schools. Let the homosexuals run rampant and keep the Hetro's PDA out of the public eye. Then tragedy befalls our country, Not just Sept 11th which so many of you lemmings so boldy quote, bombings of embassys, our military forces abroad.

    Then everyone starts praying and saying Oh dear God help us , boo hoo, then all of the sudden people WANT GOD again! What is this crap? You people have to learn to take the consiquences that are handed to you for your ignorance and lack of respect. That can be interpereted ANY way you like it. I'm sure the pagans and athiests will think I'm spewing God'isms and the Christians will think I'm rooting for God.

    You people need to get a grip. Learn our history and understand it well or we will be doomed to repete it over and over again until we fall. Much like the fall of the Roman Empire.

    And if anyone of you have a clue as to what I'm talking about, compare rome to us today and how close in comparisons are we NOW, to when the empire fell and was destroyed?

    Any good historian or kid who payed attention in High School should be able to figure this out.

  241. BRING ON THE JESUS FREAKS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go ahead, play devil's advocate. Tell us why your God should be a matter of educational policy.

    Assholes.

  242. Under who? by Simeon2000 · · Score: 1
    The United States of America hasn't been "Under God" (Judeo Christian or whatever) for a very, very long time.



    To claim anything else is hypocritical in the first place. "Under God" was removed long ago in spirit. It's actually probably good to see it finally manifest in the natural.

    --
    warn "Just Another Perl User" if $anyone_cares;
  243. Typical SF bullshit by gruntvald · · Score: 2

    Just trying to divert attention away from promoting the homosexual message in schools, with books like "Heather has two mommies" and "It's not just for pooping!".

  244. This Is Why We Are Happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one believe that our current approach of least-common-denominator culture weakens traditional American values, and regret this bitterly. There is much to value in "decent, God-fearing people" and traditional American ways of life.

    Traditional American ways of life as practiced by the Apache, Yavapi, or Hohokom?

    Or wait, do you mean YOUR traditional Christian way of life?

    Which would be getting eaten by lions. Oh, not THAT traditional? How about persicuting Jews in Spain? Denying that the world is round? Invading the middle east? Or moving forward, do you mean the traditional values of converting and slaughtering and destroying the traditional Native American culture referred to above?

    In other words, climb off your high horse. There's no such thing as "traditional American ways of life" -- America has been changing for the last 300 years, with waves of new immigrants coming in. And every time they do, there's a couple of idiots who long for the good old days that never existed.

    Learn a little about the history of your country. America is a country of immigrants..and unfortunately ignorants.

    Two: The "Establishment of Religion" clause is being misused. The original idea was to curtail religious oppression.

    As an athiest-- having to swear to a country "under God" is oppressive. America is not "under God" as "God" is a concept created by and existing solely of human conception, not something based in a greater reality. I resent having to pledge allegance to something grounded in a fantasy.

    But it is being used to suppress all religion, in the name of atheism.

    Any GOVERNMENT activity.

    All kinds of outre philosophies are snuck into our schools, and gain entry precisely because they are not couched in religious terms. For instance, it would be perfectly legal to teach communism in the classroom.

    To teach, sure. It should be legal to teach about the concept of God as well. It's part of a round education. You can teach about the Pope and say "this is what they believe".... You can teach about communists and say "this is what they believe".... but there's a difference between exposing communism and promoting it. A difference between explaining a concept and forcing kids to swear by it.

    Let me add to all this that while we are not Christians -- especially on Slashdot, it seems! -- this is a largely Christian society, and its rules are largely based on the good-ol' Judeo-Christian worldview.

    The difference between the US and other countries of the time is that the US government was SEPERATED from a christian worldview. Citizens are free to practice whatever they want in private, but the government can not take a position for or against any religion in particular.

    There has to be a balance somewhere between protection of minority views and legalized suppression of majority views.

    there is. Religious institutions enjoy all kinds of special priviliges-- they are tax excempt being the biggest one.

    An Athiest

  245. sponsered by by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps that can replace it with a sponsorship message...

    blah blah Liberty blah blah Lewinsky blah blah under a Coke! Ah we know it tastes good!

  246. okay, let's hope the money is next! by Tumbleweed · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now all they gotta do is remove that offensive "In God We Trust" from the money, and I'll be much happier. They're about to redesign the $20 (to add more colour), so hopefully this will happen before that. I'm sure our money will still be ugly, but at least it'll be colourful, and hopefully, diety-free.

    1. Re:okay, let's hope the money is next! by mysticgoat · · Score: 1

      ...diety-free [money]

      Oooh, I'd like that. I bet rolly-polly butterball dollars would stretch much further than these underfed things they are giving us now.

    2. Re:okay, let's hope the money is next! by alumshubby · · Score: 2

      Naaah, the right thing to do is to just add an l between the o and d in God and make the backed-currency folks jump up and down in glee, pointing, clapping and saying "See! We were right all along!"

      --
      "How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
  247. Next thing you know.... by warpSpeed · · Score: 2

    We will not be able to have hot dogs at baseball games, eat apple pie, or sing the Star Spangled Banner....

    Oh, and by this reasoning our legal tender is no longer constitutional, either.

  248. What is scary is the quote by Sen. Charles Grassle by ferrocene · · Score: 4, Insightful

    R-Iowa:
    "This decision is so much out of the mainstream of thinking of Americans and the culture and values that we hold in America, that any Congressman that voted to take it out would be putting his tenure in Congress in jeopardy at the next election," Grassley said.

    His quote describes exactly what should NOT happen in today's society. Doesn't anyone do what is right, and not what will get him re-elected? Collectively, we're still operating in the 17th century.

    --
    Most folk'll never lose a toe, and then again some folk'll...
  249. A good start, but... by ebcdic · · Score: 2

    ... how about getting rid of the rest of it?
    How many other countries make their children
    recite any kind of pledge of allegiance?

    Looked at from outside the US, it's a strange blemish of
    totalitarianism on one of the world's more
    democratic countries.

    I wouldn't have any allegiance to a country
    that made me pledge it.

    1. Re:A good start, but... by JimPooley · · Score: 2

      Exactly. The whole thing is kind of creepy. I mean, it would be like having kids in British schools sing 'God Save The Queen' every morning. And that would be patently ridiculous. Nobody knows the words anyway!

      --

      "Information wants to be paid"
    2. Re:A good start, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never thought this was ENFORCED by law... I mean, it's not like people are arrested daily for not reciting the pledge every day in front of their telescreens...



      At least not yet...

  250. Wow by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

    Personally, if I had been forced to say this stuff everyday in school, I would have told them where they could shove it :) Does it really take a court 50 years to figure out that this is unconstitutional ? Oh, yeah probably, since they're all backlogged with micro-soft anti-trust cases and people suing over hot-coffee lol.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  251. Re:EXACTLY! by symbolic · · Score: 2


    A voluntary participation in the pledge might be OK, but the fact that it's mandatory in most schools (at least at the elementary level) suggests not patriotism, but indoctrination. I'd venture to say that most kids who endure this ritual every day (as I did) have no idea of the implications involved.

  252. Definition of Religion and Promoting Atheism by PineHall · · Score: 2

    It seems to me that atheism is as much of a religion as Christianity or Islam. The only difference is the lack of believing in a supreme being(s). I define religion as one's worldview. It does not have to have belief in a "god". To have the phrase "under God", shows where the majority of Americans are in their beliefs. To always avoid any phrase with (g/G)od in it is to promote atheism. I do feel that these lawsuits are tactics by atheists to promote atheism in an indirect way.

    1. Re:Definition of Religion and Promoting Atheism by SagSaw · · Score: 1

      To always avoid any phrase with (g/G)od in it is to promote atheism. I do feel that these lawsuits are tactics by atheists to promote atheism in an indirect way.

      I agree with all your points, however, this case is not about removing all references to God(s), but about whether or not a law requiring students to acknowedge the existance of God is constitutional.

      A law requiring students to recite "God does not exist." each day would be equally unconstitutional.

      --
      Come test your mettle in the world of Alter Aeon!
    2. Re:Definition of Religion and Promoting Atheism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Almost anywhere (unless someone DID pass an unconstitutional law there) does NOT require anyone to recite the pledge if they have reasons. (meaning, if they are of a different religeon etc, etc.) That is exactly why I have no problem with it being there, and to me, this just looks like the Atheist equivalent of a fundy nutcase going off the deep end.

    3. Re:Definition of Religion and Promoting Atheism by radja · · Score: 2

      no it isn't, since not mentioning god is not the same as denying its existence.

      the phrase "I like daffodils" is neither theist, deist or atheist.

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
  253. From a european point of view... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pledging allegiance to a flag is so pathetic, let alone living in a nation under god.

  254. Who's the patriot? by VValdo · · Score: 2

    You have two choices in life, you can go with the flow, ie conform, or you can be differnt. Changing the freaking rules is not an option. Why upset the rest of the country for a handful of people? Last time I checked majority rules buddy.

    Didn't King George III say that in about 1776?

    W

    --
    -------------------
    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  255. This has gone too far by sapphire42 · · Score: 1

    We are taking this FAR beyond our forefathers EVER intended. This country was founded by religious people who were fleeing those were persecuting them. Now this same country has ended up persecuting the religious. This is not what was intended by separation of church and state. It was to keep religious leaders from being THE leaders and having too much power and thus corruption. Our freakin' country's motto is "In God We Trust" for pete's sake. I'm thinking we were better off when we really believed that. Every religion has a 'God' in some form, this is becoming a crusade to remove all religion and spirituality from this country, and we are doomed when that happens. I had a friend in school whose parents didn't want her to say the pledge. She had a note. She didn't say, while we did. No big deal. It wasn't an issue. No one was hurt by it.
    I am scared for the direction this country is taking. The schools are where this country is going wrong. We wonder why it's such a mess, take a look at the schools. Thank god for private schools.

    1. Re:This has gone too far by Fester213 · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Our freakin' country's motto" was "E Pluribus Unum" (Out of Many, One) when it was founded. "In God We Trust" was substituted for it on currency in 1955, during the McCarthy era, at the same time "under God" was inserted into the pledge of allegiance. The reasoning behind both was to distance ourselves from the Godless Commies.

      What about religions that beleive in multiple gods? What about atheists?

      Regarding the girl in your example, did you read exerpts of the decision? The court ruled that the current precedent prsented an "unacceptable choice between participating and protesting". The Cold War was a whole lot of no fun for everyone, and those two phrases are artifacts from it that need to go.

      --

      -- Fester
      "Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows."
    2. Re:This has gone too far by smagruder · · Score: 2

      How loud can I yell AMEN? :)

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    3. Re:This has gone too far by dmadole · · Score: 1

      And what language is "E Pluribus Unum"?

      Latin.

      And by 1776, who were the only people really using Latin?

      Christians.

    4. Re:This has gone too far by chazzf · · Score: 2

      Never mind that it is a generally accepted practice for mottos to be written in Latin. Also never mind that Latin was the language of educated men at the time. Your argument seems rather similar to stating that if people fileshare and CD sales go down, one causes the other, regardless of other factors.

      ~Chazzf

      --
      No statement is true, not even this one.
    5. Re:This has gone too far by ninetynine9z · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. Its sad to see so many people here think that that clause should be removed. :(

    6. Re:This has gone too far by dmadole · · Score: 1

      Why was Latin the language of educated men at the time?

      Because most universities at the time were run by Christians.

      It was only a matter of time before someone on this topic had to bring up filesharing and CD sales. It seems that is all that most people on Slashdot can relate anything to.

    7. Re:This has gone too far by Fester213 · · Score: 1

      Oh please. Just because the Catholic church held mass in Latin doesn't make it an endorsement of religion. Scientists use latin a lot to, and that doesn't make them Catholic. You're just being facetious.

      Every motto that wants to sound important and established is written in latin.

      --

      -- Fester
      "Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows."
  256. i used to not understand by cyberbob2010 · · Score: 0

    but just recently i went to Buckeye Boys state and spent a week with American Legion members. The point is not the wording, the point is what it stands for. For the people who gave their life in combat defending this country, what they were fighting for was all of the freedoms that we now enjoy. one of the freedoms was the right to worship freely and most of those who had died in defence of our nation were of some mainstream protestant/ christian judea belief. I'm no right wing, conservatist republican all american football team, own a big house, buy a ford and shoot all the fags kinda guy - but i do understand the importance of the pledge of allegiance and what it stands for and am able to look past the wording because of it.

    --
    We seldom regret saying too little but often regret saying too much.
  257. How few is too few to count? by Daetrin · · Score: 1
    So 24% (when i put my vote in, lemming that i am) think that it's unconstitutional.

    That's a minority, but if 24% of the people feel that something is religiously opressive, does that other 76% have the right to demand that it stay?

    I would think that 24% is a non-trivial number, especially when talking about a constitutionally protected right. Certainly all kinds of hell would be raised if someone proposed an amendment that would take away voting privilegs from 24% of the registered voters in the US.

    However as demonstrated by the Senate's action, 76% in support of this issue is enough to guarantee that the government will favor them, regardless of the morality of the situation or the rights of the 24%.

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    1. Re:How few is too few to count? by rockwalrus · · Score: 1

      My guess is significantly less than 24% would vote that it is "religiously opressive." That's a lot stronger of a statement than asking them if they think it's unconstitutional.

      --


      Rockwalrus

      The sleep of reason produces monsters -- Francisco Goya
    2. Re:How few is too few to count? by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      Well ok, that's true. However i think that generally the point still stands. Although it can be taken to rediculous extremes, i think more weight lies with those who believe that something is against a Constitutionally guaranteed freedom.

      99% of the people can't legislate that 1% of the people can't say a certain thing. The 1%'s right to free speach outweighs the wishes of the 99%. (And let's not deal with strawman arguments like "fire in a crowded theatre" please)

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  258. Your attitude may change in 50 years. by Tip · · Score: 1

    I agree that noone should be forced into any religion. But I sincearly wish that you would give it a chance before bashing Christianity. It is easy to get defensive and say you can't make me do that. All I ask is that you consider it fairly and not get upset because you think someone is forcing you to do something. Weather the people forcing you to do something are right or wrong you still have to answer for the consequences of your actions. There are bad apples in everything, so don't let that turn you away, there are many Christians that realize it is your choice to make.

    Just for a minute consider, what if your wrong. I know I will fair a lot better if I'm wrong than you will if you are.

    Love,

    John R. Tipton

  259. Re:What is scary is the quote by Sen. Charles Gras by 2boundless · · Score: 1

    IMNSHO That is exactly what needs to happen! I would love to see all these bought and paid for politicians sent back out into the real world every 4 years. There should be no such thing as a "tenure" in congress. We long ago became a nation of fat, happy, stupid, ignoran, god fearing, little consumers who provide neither intelligent thought no discourse in our political or freemarket system. If people could vote with their X-Boxes, all those Senators would be gone.

  260. Washington does not smell like a rose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please explain why should I take moral lessons from a man who enslaved Black people.

    1. Re:Washington does not smell like a rose by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      Because if you require someone to be perfect before accepting moral lessons on a particular topic from them then no one would ever have accepted any lessons from anyone, and we'd still think that rape murder and pillage was a good enough justification to go attack anyone within a few days walking distance.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    2. Re:Washington does not smell like a rose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please explain how, by showing a quote from GW on the creation of the United States, someone is expecting you to receive moralistic advice.

    3. Re:Washington does not smell like a rose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      O, I am slain!

  261. hm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since US Constitution is based on the premise that all people have been created equal (not descendent-from-monkeys equal or fallen-from-space equal), does rejection of references to God means it is no longer valid? So, like, this country is not legitimate?

  262. Other changes by calibanDNS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hopefully this will be the first step towards several similar changes such as removing "In God We Trust" from our currency and taking bibles out of swearing in ceremonies.

    1. Re:Other changes by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      I've been wondering about that, though. I think people should be able to use Bibles in these ceremonies- I don't feel like it's a violation of anyone's rights. However, they should be free to use the Koran, etc., or whatever else they like within reason. Certainly we shouldn't force a Muslim/Buddhist/godless freak to swear on the Bible. I'm just not at all offended by the fact that the president is sworn in with a Bible. Nowhere is it said that politicians can't have religion, even if I sometimes wish they'd stop talking about God so much.

    2. Re:Other changes by psych031337 · · Score: 2
      Hopefully this will be the first step towards several similar changes such as removing "In God We Trust" from our currency and taking bibles out of swearing in ceremonies.

      And when that is done, get the Bible rated to a status that disabled kids to read it alone. There is a lot of creepy, threatening, immoral, intolerant and outright violent and bloody stuff in there, that's for sure. I don't even want to count the amount of contradictions to the current constitution.

      I don't care how a priest defines or interprets passages along the lines of "eye for an eye,...". And they don't care how Quentin Tarantino explains the violence in his movies. It is there, anyone can make up his own mind, but it sure needs a rating to protect the youth.

      I think we should start a petition to pull the bible and have it placed on the list of banned books. Just for the fun of it. I'd like to see the bible belt uproar.
      --
      +++ath0
    3. Re:Other changes by curtisk · · Score: 1

      >>taking bibles out of swearing in ceremonies

      Man, this topic could go for days, and the above mentioned really is one of the funnier offshoots of the un-seperation of church and state....

      Like the Bible is some sort of "truth-machine"

      It really is silly when you think about it, let's play on superstition to try to MAKE people tell the truth....LOL!

      So if/when they try any people of any non-christian faith are they going to have to ...swear to tell the truth...ON THE BIBLE?!

      And if you lie under oath, why does mankind punish you with purgery? Isn't it between you and God at that point? I'm sure God can take care of business, right?

      I'm all for let everyone believe what they want, but erally when you look at how much religion is almost subliminally inserted into our lives, thats wrong

      --

      Sehr geehrter Toilettenbenutzer!

  263. Since when is Christianity monotheism? by Skyshadow · · Score: 2

    Christians pray to Jesus, they pray to the holy spirit, they pray to saints which cover certain aspects of life, they believe in an Adversary... Since when is that monotheism? Even the Ten Commandments imply that God/Yaweh isn't alone, just that you're not to worship any other god before him.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  264. Not good by dwsauder · · Score: 1
    The Pledge is about creating a national culture -- that is, a body of common knowledge that we all share. It certainly is true that we don't care so much about these things when we are in the midst of peace and prosperity. (And in most people's minds, we are still enjoying peace and prosperity. Last I knew, there have been no shortages or rationing, or a large-scale call-to-arms.) When peace and prosperity leave us, those unifying elements do a lot to unite us. I'm not just talking about the Pledge, but also our National Anthem and other patriot songs. Shortly after 9/11, many groups around the country sang 'God Bless America', including members of the House of Representatives and the Senate. Imagine a future generation that doesn't know the tune or the words to that patriotic song, or any other patriot song.

    How about sitting down to watch the movie Red Dawn to get an idea of what conditions can be like when we aren't enjoying peace and prosperity. (I'm sure there are better movies than Red Dawn, but that one comes to mind.)

    1. Re:Not good by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      If all our nation stands for can be summed up in a few verses, a forced prayer to a cloth idol, or a religious slogan on the back of a coin, then what is there to be proud of?

      The USA is supposed to stand for freedom, for opportunity. Those things are not compatible with brainwashing and indoctrination.

      Lets swear off the practices of the people we have fought against in the past, and become the US we are claiming to be. Maybe then, children will seek out patriotic songs, and sing them with pride, rather than just playing along so they don't get into trouble.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Not good by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure there is undeveloped film that would make a better movie than the NRA porn that is Red Dawn.

  265. Re:EXACTLY! by AnalogBoy · · Score: 2

    IMHO, and in my interpretation, the USA was meant to be Government free from the control of religion. Instead now it is Religion in key control of the government - I think it's a given that religion is the driving force behind most of the philisophical and moral decisions of the USA. A few key, token decisions notwitholding.

    The USA is already too far gone. All we can hope for now is a revealing post mortem. Our only hope is the next generation, sickened by the current.

  266. Re:Yikes. Just yikes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    it'll be like the whole abortion debate, only it'll be over something ultimately rather inconsequential.

    Ah, but abortion is inconsequential...

  267. 'Enemy Combatants' Arrested in San Francisco by guttentag · · Score: 2
    Thursday, June 27, 2002
    A platoon of U.S. Marines stormed the United States Court of Appeals in San Francisco today and retrieved a group of "enemy combatants" that was allegedly plotting an attack against the moral fiber of the country.

    The combatants, disguised as federal judges in black robes, were flown directly to Guantanamo Bay for detention.

  268. doesn't matter by Josh_Borke · · Score: 1

    doesn't anyone realize that this court, the 9th district is very liberal and this is probably going to be shot down by the supreme court.

  269. Money. by frameshift · · Score: 1

    the next thing is to take "in god we trust" off our currency, so i can stop crossing it out with a sharpie.

  270. Thanks for responding with your comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every person I've ever met who's been in the military has a view very much like your own. They understand that while the flag is a symbol, its a symbol of something special. Its not the same as the symbol some business, or the UN or whatever. The US Flag means something because of what America does (good or bad).

    I recall a WWII vet writing about burning American flags. He said the first thing they did when they took over some German installation, was remove the Nazi flag because it represented something (and strangely does today, despite the absence of Nazi Germany.

  271. Europeans, can I ask... by Dirtside · · Score: 2

    Can I get your opinion on which European countries are the best in terms of religious (and other forms of) tolerance? I'm getting awful sick of the religious attitude here in the U.S., and am seriously considering moving to somewhere that I don't have to fear getting lynched because I don't believe in a mythical superbeing. I've heard Finland is good, but it's kind of cold... suggestions?

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    1. Re:Europeans, can I ask... by signingis · · Score: 1

      Can I get your opinion on which European countries are the best in terms of religious (and other forms of) tolerance? I'm getting awful sick of the religious attitude here in the U.S., and am seriously considering moving to somewhere that I don't have to fear getting lynched because I believe in a mythical superbeing. Suggestions?

      --

      I prefer a void in conversation to a vacuous one.
    2. Re:Europeans, can I ask... by Shade,+The · · Score: 2

      I take it you don't live in the EU then? Have you ever been there at all? I would moderate you troll, sir, if I had any points.

      You're measuring Europe by history for one; by the same reasoning you could argue that the US is inhabited by people who like to genocide Native Americans (falwed reasoning I know, but now more flawed than the parent). And you're also arguing that terrorism means intolerance - only true for the people blowing themselves up or planting bombs. And Europe is more used to terrorism (as it has a lot of borders, and therefore more friction), which means it's less likely to pass draconic laws.

      And secondly, the EU *is* democratic. MEPs (Members of European Parliment) are elected in a democratic fashion. The only thing undemocratic about it is that the presidency is rotated from country to country. So one year it would be headed by the French, then after 5 years it could be the Germans, say, and so on and so forth. But that's really quite a sensible option, as it encourages fairness.

      Furthermore, the vast majority of government descisions are national. Only when they affect the EU Declaration of Human Rights or some other higher law is there a problem. And member countries can always disagree (even though, generally, the policies of the EU are fairly sensible).

  272. MOD THIS DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please.

  273. BEHOLD!!!... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the Wrath of God shall Smit Thee down the moment Thou Children refuseth to bow before Him at ~8:00am before Their elementary school lessons concerning adding and subtracting factions and reading five page long stories with a 16 word vocabulary and 18 point font, and, HARK!!!... Recess of Slothful activities at the daily MidSolar passing and Hot Lunch with a tiny carton of Milk.

  274. Pretty sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going to sue the plaintiff for infringing on my religious beliefs and wasting my tax dollars.

    We truly are a nation of fools, standing on the shoulders of our ancestors who sacrificed so many things to keep God as a foundation of our country.

  275. Scientologists agree with the decision... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...one nation, under L. Ron Hubbard....

  276. My mail (and Thank you Michael A. Newdow!) by jkeegan · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Here's the email I just sent out to quite a few people:

    Subject: pledge

    (stop reading if you're the type to complain)

    I know many will be quite divided on the subject, and many will disagree with my stance (which I believe they have a right to), but I'd just like to state my resounding support for what's just been decided in California.

    (from CNN)
    "A federal appeals court today ruled the Pledge of Allegiance is an unconstitutional 'endorsement of religion' because Congress added the phrase 'under God' in 1954. In its ruling, the court said, 'The Pledge, as currently codified, is an impermissible government endorsement of religion.'"

    As a life-long atheist, it's been a constant struggle to try hard to accept and respect others' beliefs, but I do it. But it often feels like a one-way street. I'm told to "just accept" that we live in a country with "In God We Trust" on our money. I was trained as a kid (as we all were) to recite and respect our pledge of allegiance, even though they "threw in" the bit about someone's god. It seems I'm to be tolerant of others' beliefs, but it's ok for the majority to overlook mine.

    I never truly thought I'd see this issue publicly addressed. It's easier to say "just let it be", "don't we have other things to worry about?", or "it's just tradition!"? I'm sure they said similar things when other "traditions" like slavery or women's inability to vote were being complained about.

    So, let it be known far and wide - that while I've been trained to be proud to say our pledge of allegiance (to share in that communal idea called patriotism), there's always been this dark secret buried down in the "don't bother worrying about that" department. That it somehow belonged "less" to me because I wasn't "just going along with the program".

    I feel more patriotic today.

    ..Jeff Keegan

    p.s. Eisenhower added "under god" to the pledge of allegiance in 1954.
    Eisenhower: "From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our Nation and our people to the Almighty."

    --

    ..Jeff Keegan
    seven syllables explain TiVo: kee gan dot org slash ti vo
    1. Re:My mail (and Thank you Michael A. Newdow!) by Mr.+Droopy+Drawers · · Score: 1

      Dude,
      This debate is older than 1954.

      Jefferson said,
      "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with inherent and inalienable rights; that among these, are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed; that whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness." --Declaration of Independence as originally written by Thomas Jefferson, 1776. ME 1:29, Papers 1:315

      If there is no God, there is no Moral Authority. No reason to denounce the Holocaust. No reason to denounce the Crusades. No reason for Republicanism. I recommend a a little time in American History class.

      --

      To Copy from One is Plagiarism; To Copy from Many is Research.

    2. Re:My mail (and Thank you Michael A. Newdow!) by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      Dude, This debate is older than 1954.

      Jefferson said,
      "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with inherent and inalienable rights;
      ...

      I've already given the major Jefferson "I do not find in our particular superstition of Christianity one redeeming feature" quote elsewhere, so here are some others.

      "The hocus-pocus fantasy of a God, like another Cerberus, with one body and three heads, had its birth and growth in the blood of thousands and thousands of martyrs."
      - Thomas Jefferson in Jefferson's Works, Vol. IV

      "Our civil rights have no dependence on our religious opinions, more than on our opinions in physics and geometry....The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg."
      - Jefferson's "The Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom"

      "...an amendment was proposed by inserting the words, 'Jesus Christ...the holy author of our religion,' which was rejected 'By a great majority in proof that they meant to comprehend, within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and the Mohammedan, the Hindoo and the Infidel of every denomination.'"
      -from Jefferson's biography

      Since you didn't quote Washington or Adams or Madison or any of the other founding fathers, i shall allow you to look up for yourself what they had to say about Christianity. Trust me though, you won't like it.

      The Founding Fathers on Religion
      Athiesm Awareness

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    3. Re:My mail (and Thank you Michael A. Newdow!) by strags · · Score: 2

      If there is no God, there is no Moral Authority. No reason to denounce the Holocaust. No reason to denounce the Crusades. No reason for Republicanism. I recommend a a little time in American History class.

      DUDE...

      If you believe that the only source of morals is some imaginary guy with a white beard that sits up in the clouds and gets pissed off when you masturbate, you are an idiot.

      I don't need your god to tell me how I should behave toward other people.

    4. Re:My mail (and Thank you Michael A. Newdow!) by Yunzil · · Score: 2

      If there is no God, there is no Moral Authority.

      If that's true, then why aren't there rampaging mobs of atheists raping and pillaging their way across the country?

      No reason to denounce the Holocaust.

      Wrong. Any sane person thinks the Holocaust was an immeasurable atrocity. Which was caused by a devout believer in God, I might add.

      No reason to denounce the Crusades.

      If there is a God, then why should we denounce the Crusades, since they were done in His name?

      I recommend a a little time in American History class.

      I recommend a little time in the real world.

  277. I'm an ammendment to be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    [Little Boy] Hey, who left all this garbage on the steps of Congress?
    [Amendment] I'm not garbage
    I'm an amendment to be
    Yes, an amendment to be
    And I'm hoping that they'll ratify me
    There's a lot of flag-burners who have got too much freedom
    I want to make it legal for policemen to beat 'em
    'Cause there's limits to our liberties
    At least, I hope and pray that there are
    'Cause those liberal freaks go too far
    [Little Boy] But why can't we just make a law against flag burning?
    [Amendment] Because that law would be unconstitutional
    But if we change the constitution -
    [Little Boy] - Then we could make all sorts of crazy laws!
    [Amendment] Now you're catching on!
    [Little Boy] But what if they say you're not good enough to be in the constitution?
    [Amendment] Then I'll crush all opposition to me!
    And I'll make Ted Kennedy pay
    If he fights back, I'll say that he's gay
    [Congressman] Good news, amendment! They ratified you!
    You're in the US Constitution!
    [Amendment] Oh, yeah! Door's open, boys!

  278. San Francisco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A man walked into a flower shop in Boston and said, "I understand you wire flowers to anywhere in the country."

    "Indeed we do, sir," answered the clerk.

    "Well, wire me to San Francisco," the customer said. "I'm a pansy."

  279. Why do you live in the US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And no this is not a troll! The founding fathers of America certainly belived in God (often referred to as a Creator). They didn't want a state run religion, but they certainly weren't scared of religious speech in Gov't. You must be offended by many other parts of the Consititution, and the Declaration of Independece as they were all written by people who believed in God, and felt the America should trust in God.

    1. Re:Why do you live in the US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a troll and you know it. The only other possible explanation is that you're incredibly ignorant. The founding fathers differed in their beliefs. Jefferson and Adams were most certainly not Christians though. They didn't have much respect for Christians in general either. The Declaration of Independence was written before separation of church and state was enshrined in the Constitution. The Constitution itself doesn't really include anything religious. "In the year of our Lord" is simply how the dates were written back then. It holds no more religious meaning than I have when I say "god dammit" after I bang my knee. The "under God" part of the Pledge was added in the 50s, as was the "In God We Trust" on our currency. So don't go spouting off about the forefathers. They knew what they were doing when they decided on a separation of church and state. Too bad the nitwits that we're stuck with now care more about pandering to the public than upholding the Constitution.

  280. Re:Just saw on the news.. by kst · · Score: 1

    > President Bush called the ruling ridiculous.. They wont be removing "under god" any time soon.

    President Bush has no say in the matter.

  281. fractional reserve banking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fractional reserve banking and the ability of a PRIVATE bank to poof create money and then LOAN IT AT INTEREST to the US government is INSANE and the biggest scam and ripoff out there. Gold backed currency is so much a better idea it isn't even debateable, IMO.

    The world right now is so close to total collapse with this nutso system that so many countries use now it ain't funny. Tell ya, video games are NOT going to be very important to people by the end of this year. Neither are MP3's, sports, and all other sorts of non necessary trivia.

    I like computers and gadgets, but I spend a lot more time following the economy and politics than worrying about how to theme or apply "skins".

    We're in deep manure right now, headsup to anyone concerned who doesn't want to get caught. South american countries are falling into devastating inflationary spirals now, japan is barely keeping their head above water. The middle east will onl;y take one kook doing something really stupid to start world war 3. These are dangerous times now, in my opinion again, it's a GOOD time to completely get out of debt, tighten the belt, and make sure your living arrangements are paid off.

    I'm old enough to have talked to a lot of geezers who went through the depression. Events can change so fast and what you thought was reality can turn about to not be reality in a matter of days, with NO HOPE OF RESOLUTION, ie, "no patch" for it.

    Anyones MMV, this is just an opinion, actually hope I'm wrong, but I am seeing nothing to dissuade me from these opinions.

    1. Re:fractional reserve banking by King_TJ · · Score: 2

      Honestly, the issue I think needs addressing is the blatant throwing away of money by the United States to other countries for dubious purposes.

      EG. George Bush signing off on sending Africa $500 billion for AIDS research last week.

      When you look at money as simply an aid in exchanging goods or services - the fractional reserve banking system doesn't cause so many "real world" issues. Where it breaks down, IMO, is when you start shipping off funds to other countries with no hope of an eventual payback, and you don't receive anything of value in return. Each time this is done, the strength of the nation as a whole is sapped.

      I can see how the current system ensures the continuation of inflation over time - but to me, the more important thing is whether or not the nation retains its real wealth. The dollar figures are just numbers, and it doesn't ultimately matter if a loaf of bread costs 25 cents or $2.25 - as long as the average citizen is paid a salary that's equivalent. We only get screwed when we export some of our funds from the govt. citizen loop by giving it away to another nation for worthless causes.

  282. Re:The pledge is creepy... Formatted this time! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [Little Boy] Hey, who left all this garbage on the steps of Congress?
    [Amendment] I'm not garbage
    I'm an amendment to be
    Yes, an amendment to be
    And I'm hoping that they'll ratify me
    There's a lot of flag-burners who have got too much freedom
    I want to make it legal for policemen to beat 'em
    'Cause there's limits to our liberties
    At least, I hope and pray that there are
    'Cause those liberal freaks go too far
    [Little Boy] But why can't we just make a law against flag burning?
    [Amendment] Because that law would be unconstitutional
    But if we change the constitution -
    [Little Boy] - Then we could make all sorts of crazy laws!
    [Amendment] Now you're catching on!
    [Little Boy] But what if they say you're not good enough to be in the constitution?
    [Amendment] Then I'll crush all opposition to me!
    And I'll make Ted Kennedy pay
    If he fights back, I'll say that he's gay
    [Congressman] Good news, amendment! They ratified you!
    You're in the US Constitution!
    [Amendment] Oh, yeah! Door's open, boys!

  283. Re:Time for NATIONAL RELIGION...not by the_greywolf · · Score: 1

    this is the last thing we want. a national religion is WHY WE ARE HERE IN THE FIRST PLACE. this country was founded to escape the persecution of the Church of England and the churches of other nations.

    when a church is endorsed by the government, it's the end of the nation. that's what Jefferson was talking about when he mentioned a "separation of church and state" (which, BTW, it NOT IN ANY GOVERNMENT DOCUMENT, INCLUDING THE CONSTITUTION.)

    --
    grey wolf
    LET FORTRAN DIE!
  284. Monty Python by EccentricAnomaly · · Score: 2

    "The next thing you know it will be illegial or unlawful to utter the word 'God' in public"

    "Jehovah!, Jehovah!, Jehovah!"

    --
    There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
  285. petty issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    of great interest to dinosaurs. ayatollahs. crusaders. bigots.
    so change the F** law already and move along. better things to worry about.

  286. While the ideals are good, They should not be by crovira · · Score: 2

    only applied to America.

    The pledge of allegiance should be more of a decleration to human rights (the right of self-determination.)

    The concept of the nation, any nation, which always seems to bind mind and body into some concept alleging to be larger than the individual but always sems to do it at the expense of the individual, should be eliminated.

    How did we get here?

    In the beginning was the nation state. But they kept warring with each other over land, the politics of control (surely nobody remembers "The Politics Of Dancing,") and marketing rights.

    Then we continued with religion. Millions died, slaughtered for something which the best religion could never substantiate. (Pantheism pits the gods against each other. Monotheism pits men against each other. The latter is proving to be even more destructive than the former. Do away with both and you'll be happier. They ALL suck. Doesn't matter which. They start with a suspension of disbelief and slide down from there.)

    Then we went on to nationhood. Millions more died over the course of the last hundred years and we close the millenium with unprecedented slaughter. (but its was back to the nation states again. (The first world war, the war that was supposed to end all war, was faught over the Prussians pig marketing rights into Silesia, Serbia and the Meditteranean nations. Look at what Churchill wrote on the cuses of the conflict.)

    How about we get our heads out of somebody else's ass-hole and breathe free for a change.

    How about pledging to not knowingly hurt, main and deceive other people. That's all.

    Hey it could work. The Catholics have lapsed into poedophilia and benign indifference on ten lousy commandements and seven deadly sins.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  287. You, sir, are still full of sh*t by Aexia · · Score: 2

    "In the year of our lord"

    That's it? A date using the Gregorian calendar? How else were they supposed to date the document? That's how all dates back then were written.

    Where's the "divine intervention" you claimed was mentioned?

  288. Not just "under god" by Pseudonym · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm waiting for the day when someone brings a lawsuit on the grounds that they worship neither the flag nor the republic for which it stands.

    As a matter of interest, do non-US-citizens who attend US public schools have to recite the pledge?

    --
    sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    1. Re:Not just "under god" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're not worshipping the flag or the republic. They're pledging allegiance to them. Not that that isn't scary enough in its own right, but it's certainly not unconstitutional. Frankly, I'm with my republic 100%, as long as they're right. The second they're wrong, I turn into a dissident. It's so complicated. May it IS just easier to pledge allegiance, so you don't have to think about things anymore.

    2. Re:Not just "under god" by smcavoy · · Score: 1

      No one is forced to say it. But can you really see a kid in grade 2 not going along with it?

    3. Re:Not just "under god" by BathTub · · Score: 1

      I always had the option of not saying it, I did though. I don't think I would have had any problems if I didn't want to say it, but I had some pretty cool teachers.

    4. Re:Not just "under god" by ArticulateArne · · Score: 2

      Uh, yeah. I never celebrated Halloween when I was a kid. Whenever our class had their party, I went to the library or something. We didn't think it was right to get dressed up like witches, etc, so we didn't. Didn't bring a federal case, just didn't participate. End of discussion.

    5. Re:Not just "under god" by i_am_nitrogen · · Score: 2

      I seem to recall a teacher violently escorting a student out of the classroom who refused to say the pledge.

      You'd be surprised though, by how tolerant of other views some religious people can be, and likewise, how intolerant some atheists can be.

      There was a girl in my AP calculus class who was an orthodox atheist, and I'm a devout Christian. Naturally there were never arguments, but quite frequently the teacher had to interrupt our class-wide discussions because class had ended. Everyone was mature enough to acknowledge and accept others beliefs, and I'm [ABORTION IS MURDER] sure most of those involved found the discussions to be educational and interesting, including the teacher.

    6. Re:Not just "under god" by blackcoot · · Score: 1

      I am one of those commie bastard green card holding hippies and when I went through Fairfax County Public Schools I had to recite the Pledge. Of course, that was only for my senior year -- until then it hadn't been mandated.

    7. Re:Not just "under god" by luciensims · · Score: 1

      You asked:
      As a matter of interest, do non-US-citizens who attend US public schools have to recite the pledge?

      As an Australian citizen (and agnosto-atheist or whatever the hell you want to call me) who grew up in the US, let me say YES. And I hated doing it. It didn't make me feel 'icky' or left out. It made me angry that I was expected to be loyal to the US rather than to my own country.

      But frankly, in the end it didn't make any difference. The only impact it has had on me is that I remember it. But I also remember the 'nominative - accusative - dative - genative - ablative - vocative' recitation from Latin class.

      I'm glad to see that a decision has been made that actually seems to be in keeping with the spirit of the Constitution though. It seems like more and more laws get passed these days trying to legislate morals and prop up corporate interests, rather than protect the interests of the citizens.

    8. Re:Not just "under god" by Pseudonym · · Score: 2
      You'd be surprised though, by how tolerant of other views some religious people can be, and likewise, how intolerant some atheists can be.

      Doesn't surprise me in the least. People are people. Presence or absence of religion doesn't change that.

      My inner armchair psychologist thinks that many "theists" are exclusive (i.e. exclude other religions and non-religions by definition) and many "atheists" are "anti" (i.e. define their position by being "not theists", thus setting up an irrevocably contrary position from the start). This makes the whole field of religion in particular a breeding ground for intolerance no matter what side you're considering.

      Disclaimer: By "theist" and "atheist" here, I mean something specific, namely, someone who bases their identity, or perhaps the wrong part of their identity, around the concept, rather than someone who just happens to believe or not believe in one or more deities. Used in this sense, Madeleine Murray O'Hare was an atheist, but Alan Turing was someone who just happened not to believe in any deities. I hope that readers will forgive the abuse of terminology, but I hope you take my point.

      The emphasis in all this is on the word "some". As in all controversies, it's the most extreme elements who are the loudest. Some people are very tolerant. Some people are very intolerant. Most don't care, or at the very least, it never becomes an issue.

      I've personally found that geeks are some of the most tolerant people you'll find. I think it's something to do with having spent an entire childhood getting hell for being different. It makes you more likely to tolerate difference in others, so long as you are different for the right reasons. Sheep are not tolerable, but non-sheep can be found in all creeds and we respect that. That way we can get on with the serious flaming over issues that are truly important, like which software licence is best, or which operating system kernel will take over the world.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  289. I disagree with the court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once again, the most liberal court has made a decision ignoring history, and Supreme Court precedent, and made a politically correct decision devoid of common sense.

    I'm proud to say the pledge. I am proud to be an American, and I'm proud of what the US Flag stand for. I'm also glad that my kids have been learning it in school.

    Its true when I was a kid in school, I didn't appreciate it as much as I do now (now is pre Sept 11 for those keeping score at home). Sure the US has problems, but pledge isn't one of them.

  290. We've just asked the courts to define 'God' by Spirald · · Score: 1

    This issue is -the- pathological case of debates about language. IMHO, this is more about language than religion.

    One of the aspects of this case that makes it remarkable is that it is brought by an individual who is described as an 'atheist'.

    * According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition, 'atheist' means: Disbelief in, or denial of, the existence of a god.

    * Thus the definition of 'atheist' is dependent on the definition of the word 'god'.

    * The definition of the word 'god' and its cross language equivalents is arguably the most contentious and divisive issues of human history. Attempts to subject others to a particular definition of this concept are responsible for the slaughter of hundreds of millions and tyranny over billions.

    * The act by groups of people of defining the word 'god' and the subsequent implications for human motivation and behavior is at the core of what we define as 'religion'.

    * The U.S. constitution's freedom of religion tenents are designed to ensure that the government does not make laws or take actions that favor one religion over another- in this context, the constitution prevents the government from passing laws or taking actions which favor one individual's definition of the word 'god' over another's.

    * One appropriate secular, unbiased interpretation of the word 'god' (IMHO) would be 'your most all encompassing concept, in light of your own personal world view'. Surely that one is hard to logically refute without negating all existence.

    * In light of the above secular version of the word 'god', the word 'atheist' would be an oxymoron, which would mean that this definition of the word 'god', if made by the court to validate the inclusion of 'under god' in the pledge, would violate the constitution because it would be biased against atheists, if atheism is to be considered a valid beleif system.

    * If the courts decide that the word 'god' applies to a specific set of monotheistic religions, the court has effectively issued a religious doctrine favoring a particular religion, a decision which violates the constitution.

    * The 9th circuit court, in writing its decision, equated 'god' to 'jesus' and 'vishnu'- in effect, it issued a religious doctrine defining the word 'god' as referring to the highest concept of a specific set of monotheistic religions, just as those other words apply to higher concepts of various other religions. As such, it seems that the court had no jurisdiction to make such a decision because it is biased towards a specific religion.

    * The conclusion that can be derived from all these arguments is that the word 'god' is in effect a divisive razor, which causes a bias in all those who seek to incorporate it into language, by virtue of the fact that the word means something unique to every individual, and that self described atheists are defining their own belief system in terms of that which they don't beleive in- any definition at all of the word 'god'.

    It seems that due to the inherent contradictions, divisiveness, and confusion that occurs when trying to apply logic and reason to the word 'god', that the use of this word should be excluded in language that seeks to achieve clarity , inclusion and fairness, which is the goal of our constitution and framework of laws.

    Rather that trying to define the word 'god' as the property of any individual religion, the court should probably, IMHO, just roll back the act of congress which introduced the word in the first place, with the reasoning that it is impossible to incorporate the word 'god' into any official language without creating the perception of religious bias and de-facto endorsement of a particular religion- even if the word were defined to have a specific secular meaning.

    Those who would argue that the word 'god' should be incorporated into official language should take a moment to define what they mean by 'god', and achieve some consensus about that definition. If that is considered to be an impossible task, and they find that the word is not really definable to any reasonably detailed consensus, what business does the word have in the language of our legal system and our government?

    Personally, I have my own definition of a highest, unifying concept, that which no name can do justice. This is because names define and separate- what would be the point of a unifying concept if it could be defined from other concepts? It wouldn't be unifying any more. This is why the word 'god' should be left out of official public discourse and kept in the context of one's personal religion and spirituality. If people want to think of being 'under god' in the 'one nation' part of the pledge of allegience, they are welcome to invoke their own concept of such.

  291. don't party too hard! by feed_me_cereal · · Score: 2

    After looking arround at most of the posts on this site, I don't think you have to worry too much about panic over this. Well, at least on this site :) Perhaps you live near where I did in Indiana... There might be some good counter arguments to pulling that phrase out of our money, but yours is silly. The constitution dosn't tell us to seperate religion only from government utilities which everyone is forced to use... The idea that you're not forced to use cash is a stretch anyway. Not every homeless person I know has an American Express card, but they do have some cash from time to time.

    --
    "Question with boldness even the existence of a god." - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:don't party too hard! by rhaig · · Score: 2

      my counter arguments to pulling that phrase out of our money was a joke. (didn't come across that way though apparently)

      I doubt the argument to take "In God We trust" off our cash will fly, but I bet some california liberal will try.

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
  292. Talking to yourself again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good job! And you're a bigot because you want his God-believing genes out of the gene pool.

    Refer to song #1 on Dennis Leary's "No Cure For Cancer" album to find a song just about you.

  293. Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by dmaxwell · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dooo Daaa Dooo Daaa! Pascal's Wager sing 'dis song oh doo daa daaaaayy!

    Inplicit in your posts is the idea that only your belief system contains the key to moral and ethical behaivor. Everybody else must be on a greased slicky slide to Hell. The dilemma you are posing is a form of Pascal's Wager.

    The most common form of Pascal's Wager goes thusly: If you believe as I do then will reward you or least refrain from punishing you. If you don't believe as I do then you risk terrible consequences for being wrong. You have nothing lose and everything to gain by converting to my beliefs. It is a false dilemma because we might both be wrong. It may actually be the case that Zeus is pissed as Hades at losing all of his followers and that we all walk around in danger of being used for lightning bolt practice.

    The key phrase is "Without a set of morals based on something" "Something" most certainly isn't limited to "be a Judeo Christian or else!!!" That isn't a basis for morality anymore than being conditioned with puke-up drugs strapped down in a movie theater is (Clockwork Orange). Come to think it, the character that saw through it was a hellfire and brimstone pastor. In both cases, the motivation for "good" behaivor is avoiding pain either gagging or hellfire. I've known plenty of ethical atheists and unethical theists (and vice versa to be fair). The more thoughtful theists tend to acknowledge non theists can be ethical or even "moral".

    The problem here is an implicit assumption. That assumption is "Only God is fit to decide what is good." If God suddenly decided that it's your moral duty to commit a murder a month would you do it? This is not as silly as it sounds. God is commonly held to be omnipotent. This includes the ability to reverse the meanings of "good" and "evil". If God does not define what is good and evil then those meanings are accessible even to those who are not Judeo Christians. Again, most Christians seem to grok this. I've even sat in sermons that made the point that morality requires the exercise of judgement.

    If I shared your viewpoint I could logically conclude that atheists/agnostics are all homicidal libertines who just haven't been caught yet. If you don't believe this then you're engaging in some rather confusing philosophizing. Since atheists are no more murderous or larcenous than anybody else then what do you suggest keeps them in check? I think they'll take some exception to "afraid of getting caught".

    1. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hes the same class of people who thinks gay boy scout leaders are more likley to be child molesters than straight leaders (when statistics don't back that at all).

      It's much easier to just ignore them.

    2. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by hey! · · Score: 2
      That assumption is "Only God is fit to decide what is good."


      What is ironic is that in medieval christianity in the west, it was believed that issues of morality should be considered rationally. That rules of moral human behavior were based on what was good for humanity, not arbitrary rules set down by God. Granted,in this context, it was assumed that God existed and knew best what was good for humanity, but a Scholastic philosopher would not argue that an atheist has no basis at all for making moral decisions, although he might argue that the atheist would likely be led astray.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    3. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by Lathi- · · Score: 1
      The problem here is an implicit assumption. That assumption is "Only God is fit to decide what is good." If God suddenly decided that it's your moral duty to commit a murder a month would you do it? This is not as silly as it sounds. God is commonly held to be omnipotent. This includes the ability to reverse the meanings of "good" and "evil". If God does not define what is good and evil then those meanings are accessible even to those who are not Judeo Christians. Again, most Christians seem to grok this. I've even sat in sermons that made the point that morality requires the exercise of judgement.

      God is not some arbitrary individual jerking strings to see what happens. God is good. Evil can not stand in the presence of God. We base many of our measurements based on standards at NIST. I can't argue that my arm is a mile long because of those standards. I believe morality is the same way. Morality isn't arbitrary. It doesn't change with each generation. It doesn't change based on your geographical location. It isn't determined by a vote. God is the standard of morality. He is the unchanging Truth.

      The problem comes in that God is not revealed to us perfectly. There are a lot of things God has done that I don't understand. What I do understand is that we have the Bible as God's Word. Each of us as individuals (not as some corporate body that meets once a year) have the responsibility to read and understand what God is saying to us and follow it.

      Yes, people have abused God's name to justify horrible acts. It continues today. I apologize for those acts. I hope and believe that one day God will set all things Right.

      BTW, please don't lump OBL and Muslims in with Judeo-Christians. Yes, all of us are monotheist. But that doesn't make Alah == God. The Muslims think that we have perverted what Alah has said to the point of being infidels. The words of the Koran have very little in common with the words of my Bible. It is my belief that Mohomad selected one of the many gods of the ancient Arabic polytheistic beliefs and declared him the "one true god". This has no intersection with Judaism or Christianity.

      Inplicit in your posts is the idea that only your belief system contains the key to moral and ethical behaivor. Everybody else must be on a greased slicky slide to Hell.


      Yes, I believe the only way to gain eternal life is through Jesus the Christ. That's what He claimed and that's what I believe. Jesus said, "I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." He didn't say "a way, a truth, and a life."

      Does that mean I think everyone else is going to be in some place of eternal torment and pain and suffering. Actually, no. I believe that life apart from God is impossible. My reading of the Bible does not support the idea that all men have immortal souls that will live forever. I believe that after the Day of Judgement those not saved through Christ will be destroyed forever and permanently. They will simply cease to exist. Those found to be "in" Christ will be given eternal life with God.

      If I shared your viewpoint I could logically conclude that atheists/agnostics are all homicidal libertines who just haven't been caught yet. If you don't believe this then you're engaging in some rather confusing philosophizing. Since atheists are no more murderous or larcenous than anybody else then what do you suggest keeps them in check? I think they'll take some exception to "afraid of getting caught".


      If you don't believe in some kind of god or higher authority, how do you decide what is moral? Just what "feels right"? It may "feels right" to have an extra-marital affair. Does that make it right or wrong? Who's to say that some murderers don't "feel bad" about their killings. Who are you to tell them they are wrong? Without God how do you decide what is moral? Even if murder, rape, and general abuse of others is deemed immoral, who cares? If you have no consequences, who cares if you're immoral? Why not just serve yourself and get as much as you can from this life? From that stand-point, what's wrong with Bill Gates? He's just living for himself. Why should he care about his community? What price will he pay if he uses his billions to just screw the planet for the next 30 or 40 years until he dies?
    4. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't we atheists go around looting and pillaging and generally being bad? Answer: because doing so leads to bad things in this lifetime. This is independent of any afterlife.

      Who am I to say what is right and wrong? A human being, with points of view similar to many other human beings. Me and my fellow human beings say that it is wrong to murder, and that if you murder, we shall punish you. That's all the justification we need to not murder. God don't enter into it anywhere.

      What of those who are beyond our reach? Take a look at history, friend. Anyone who is too offensive will, eventually, get taken down, no matter how powerful they are - and then life will suck for the offender. It's happened before, it'll happen again.

      Humanity is its own God. We need answer to none other.

    5. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by ripler · · Score: 2


      Morality changes. It is not set in stone. Read history.

      The Victorian era promoted great changes to the moralities held by that society. We are still suffering under its effects today in the US.

      The Industrial Revolution, weapons of mass destruction, the telephone, computers, have all changed morality.

      Whether they loosen or tighten the moral code in your opinion is of no consequence, but these things do shape our society. Morality is a product of our society, and it is different for various groups of people around the globe. Some of those groups do involve religeon, but not all.

      To proclaim that one view of morality is above another because said so, is arrogant, dangerous, and probably leads down the road to mutual destruction.

      This is precisely the reason that the McCarthy era government should have never included "Under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance.

      I am of the opinion that this is the best time to bring up a debate about the ammended Pledge. We should be sending a sharp reminder to our representatives that we will not hold for the same type of government which desires to take our freedoms for the sake of fighting "Terrorism". It is far too remnicent of the "Red Menace" illusion which plauged our culture for multiple generations.

      We don't need sheep in the White House, or Congress. Bring on the revolutionaries, and give us our freedom!

      Weigh your morals carefully, yourself. It can take a lifetime of contemplation, but can be very rewarding.

    6. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by Lathi- · · Score: 1
      Why don't we atheists go around looting and pillaging and generally being bad? Answer: because doing so leads to bad things in this lifetime. This is independent of any afterlife.


      So it is just a fear of getting caught?
    7. Re:Pascal's Wager Sing 'Dis Song by bytesmythe · · Score: 1
      I believe morality is the same way. Morality isn't arbitrary. It doesn't change with each generation. It doesn't change based on your geographical location. It isn't determined by a vote. God is the standard of morality. He is the unchanging Truth.

      So we should still be stoning homosexuals, executing children who "dishonor" their parents, etc.? This was morally correct behavior according to the Bible, but do we practice these things nowadays? No. Why? We find them immoral. If you want to practice Old Testament morality, go for it, but don't be surprised when you get arrested.

      Yes, people have abused God's name to justify horrible acts.

      You haven't been reading your Bible much, because Yahweh endorses those things.

      What I do understand is that we have the Bible as God's Word.

      Not really. The meaning of "the Word of God" is from ancient Jewish mysticism which said that words have power. The first "Word of Creation" is what God was. Basically, a single word spoken that brought God and all of reality into existance. The "Word of God" refers to the creative "word", not to the Bible. The Bible as you know it didn't exist until just a few hundred years ago.

      If you don't believe in some kind of god or higher authority, how do you decide what is moral?

      The same way you do.

      Just what "feels right"?

      Exactly. You don't follow strict Biblical law for the same reason no one else does. It feels wrong. MOST humans have gut reactions to certain behaviors. If we didn't, we could all act as impulsively as we want and all of us would end up dying off. We have feelings that tend to reward good behaviors (helping others) and punish bad behaviors (harming others).

      Cultural influence can play a role, especially in promoting bad behavior as being good, but people still manage to overcome it. If not, there would still be slavery in this country. In the 16-1700s, slavery was not just ok, it was morally justified, often using the Bible to support it. Many felt that it was our moral imperative to own slaves. But other people, not persuaded by the cultural directives, knew better and eventually slavery was banished.

      --
      bytesmythe
      Hypocrisy is the resin that holds the plywood of society together.
      -- Scott Meyer
  294. you have poor writing style by Super_Frosty · · Score: 1
    Your English teacher probably should have taught you not to conclude an argument with "blah blah blah." It detracts from everything you have said without adding any substance. If you were going to write nonsense at the end, why bother writing? Instead, finish your paragraph with a cogent statement.


    Why don't you try posting it again, without the "blah"?

    --
    No comment at this time
  295. "I led the pigeons to the flag..." by Insightfill · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of the William Safire column called "I led the pigeons to the flag", where he got the "misheards" from little kids.

    Many posts here have mentioned the "rote" recitation of the pledge. I would add that the additional misunderstandings that creep in can't help.

    I know I spent a year or two wondering why this one nation was invisible, and figured it would be cool to be part of that action.

    1. Re:"I led the pigeons to the flag..." by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      Yes, I always wondered who "Richard Stands" was... and why was the republic for Richard Stands and not the whole lot of us? Who is this guy!?

      --

      -pyrrho

  296. Correlation does not imply causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Otherwise you could argue JFK was assassinated in Dallas, TX because Liberace got ill in a performance in Pittsburgh, PA, simply based on the fact both events happened the same day.

    Ridiculous to the last...

    1. Re:Correlation does not imply causation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which part of "Although it may be a coincidence" didn't you actually read?

      Oh? All of it?

      Carry on then with your uninformed and misguided post.

  297. Re:Simmer down QWZX by TheFrood · · Score: 2

    It's through the pledge the children start to learn that there are higher principles than simple "me first moral relativism".

    No, all the pledge teaches children is that the United States is a Republic for Witches' Stands.

    No one learns anything by reciting a canned pledge. The time spent reciting the pledge every day would be better used to teach genuine civics lessons about what this country is supposed to stand for.

    TheFrood

    --
    If you say "I'll probably get modded down for this..." then I will mod you down.
  298. Government ~ Science by mshomphe · · Score: 2

    In fact, government should deal with the Divine much in the same that science does (should?): Be agnostic. State religion is bad (see: ), and state persecution of religion is bad (see: any of the aforementioned theocracies, in addition to China's dealing with religious groups). The government is supposed to encourage public discussion and free expression. Fundamentalists and atheists can argue til they're blue in the face, but when it comes to public policy, God gets in the way. We can't demostrate that God encourages certain rituals (communion, etc.), but we can arrive at good public policy through rational discourse that's devoid of the Divine. Although many religions prohibit murder, it's not a religious prohibition, since it serves a social/secular purpose that transcends individual rights (so if I believe God wants me to kill Slashdot geeks, the rights of other people to live trumps my religious beliefs.)

    In the same vein, science cannot admit or prohibit God. Admission means that we have demonstrated the existance of the Divine. Saying that the Divine does NOT exist is contrary to the scientific method; namely, you cannot prove a negative.

    It's a very fascinating conundrum: How to deal with the Divine. In general, it seems like the best policy for both science and the government to pass over it in silence.

    --
    She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.
  299. Did anyone NOT see it coming? by i_am_nitrogen · · Score: 1, Troll

    I suppose this was inevitable... I mean, after all, this is one nation under [insert favorite villain here, such as Bob, or Bill, or what's his name]... The constitution states that there will be a separation of church and state, and that all people will have freedom of religion. It never says freedom from religion. Atheism is a religion too...

    As for my personal opinion, I think that removing the "under God" part is really lame, perhaps more so than adding it in the first place. I mean, if little Johnny's parents are upset about him being exposed to other beliefs, why not just explain to him that in their home, God means evolution, or DNA, or money, or something like that? It's getting to the point where people who believe in a God or many gods are treated unjustly because of their religious beliefs.

    As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.

    1. Re:Did anyone NOT see it coming? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      I mean, if little Johnny's parents are upset about him being exposed to other beliefs, why not just explain to him that in their home, God means evolution, or DNA, or money, or something like that?

      Because its totally unfair to the child. K-12 is a pressure cooker of peer pressure; why force a 7 year old kid who doesn't believe in god to say the pledge (and lie) or refuse to do so and justify it? If the kid sticks to his guns sooner or later some other kid will call him a "devil worshiper". How is that fair?

  300. Re:Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, if Geddy Lee doesn't have a problem with singing the word "God", you might want to extend a little "tolerance" toward those poor, deluded souls who don't believe exactly as you do.

  301. Church, huh? by beleg777 · · Score: 1

    So how do you people justify equating Church and religion? My understanding has always been that there is a freedom of religion, meaning the state will not force anyone to follow a particular religion, and there is a seperation of Church and state. The seperation of Church and state, as I understand it, was intended to keep the Chruch from gaining political power and influence, such as the Church of England.

    I'd be happy to hear counter evidence though.

    --

    Science may someday discover what faith has always known.
    1. Re:Church, huh? by forkboy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      My understanding has always been that there is a freedom of religion, meaning the state will not force anyone to follow a particular religion

      Freedom of religion also implies not HAVING a religion. You're missing the big issue is that people who are atheists are seeing their children being forced (by law) to recite an affirmation to a god whom the children are being taught does NOT exist. Imagine the ruckus that would arise from religious groups if the pledge were changed to "One nation, there is no God, indivisible, with liberty blah blah blah)

      They'd shit a pigeon over it. And with good reason. No governmental organzition should dictate dogma (or lack there of) to it's citizens, let alone children. That's the reason the Taliban fucked up Afghanistan so badly. (as an extreme example)

      --
      This message brought to you by the Council of People Who Are Sick of Seeing More People.
    2. Re:Church, huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Flamebait? Wtf? I was merely pointing out that his comparison between church and religion wasn't the issue here. I swear, give an asshole a mod point and all hell breaks loose.

  302. You have english comprehension problems... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...one nation, under God, indivisible, with..."

    Obviously you don't understand the context of the modifier. Either that or you're trying to be funny. Either way, ha ha.

    1. Re:You have english comprehension problems... by justfred · · Score: 1

      Neither - I know what the comma is for, but I still think that when read, the ", under god," pointlessly dilutes the meaning of "one nation indivisible". Especially when it's read aloud, either as "onenationundergodindivisible" or, as lately, "one nation UNDER GOD (indivisible)"

  303. "WWJD" by 1010011010 · · Score: 2

    I tell people that stands for:

    "What Would Judas Do?"

    hehehe

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
    1. Re:"WWJD" by raygundan · · Score: 1

      Funny, I always thought it stood for "Who Wants Jack Daniels?"

    2. Re:"WWJD" by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Hmmm...
      "What Would Jesus Drink?"
      JD!

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  304. "Don't Panick"? We should be thankful... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why am I reading so many posts that say "Don't Panick"? Why should we panick? Where is our right to force certain beliefs on people? Let us choose what we believe.
    Remember why so many people came here? Why the Declaration of Independence and Constitution were originally made? I don't either, I wasn't there. But I hear it was because of the oppression felt in Mother England to worship how the government deemed right, and not how the people wanted. That would explain why religious freedom was established so early in these founding documents.
    How can we, as a nation, determine which God to worship? I am Christian (or as some critics would say, Mormon) but I see no offense in letting my Wiccan, Pagan, Jewish, or (could it be?) other-Christian-sect neighbors worship how and what they please. Freedom has many reaches in US history, and thankfully one of them is to (theoretically) worship in peace.
    Leave it out, put it in, it doesn't matter to me. I know who I worship, I know what I worship. I want my kids to go to school to become educated, and to go to church to become wise. Hopefully we can let others do the same.

  305. legal problem by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't the greater legal problems be that an oath is being taken under duress by minors. It also smacks of slavery.

  306. Puny Americans!! by Slickoil · · Score: 0

    MORBO is your only hope for salvation!! In 3 days I must be unilaterally accepted as your beloved and feared leader, put my witty sayings on your money, my beautifull giant brain on your flags and my ever watchful eyes in your bedrooms! If you do not comply I shall rain my wrath upon you like so many Jerry Falwells and consume your souls!! You have no other choice in the matter, I shall be your KING!!!

  307. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" .....hypocrisy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In your post, you said the following:

    "We need him dead, simply because he deserves it."

    and then you said:

    "I don't have to believe in your creation myth to know that killing people is unacceptable."

    Need I say more?

    it was edder vedder who once wrote, "I can kill cuz in God I trust"

  308. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  309. Arlington National Cemetery by jayemdae · · Score: 1

    If that's the case, we need to start ripping head stones out of the ground cause its a military cemetery. I think this is really retarded..

    1. Re:Arlington National Cemetery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's retarded. Headstones are to honor the individual, not the government. If you hadn't noticed, there is no cross or star of david or crescent etc. on many of the headstones. Get a grip moron.

  310. Meaningless Words by thales · · Score: 2

    "The words behind the pledge are lost because they learn to recite them like robots long before they can really understand the implications of the words."

    It's been a very long time since I was in school but I can still say the pledge Without giving it a thought the words just spill out of my mouth leaving no impression on my mind. I was also in school before manditory prayer was banned so I can also parrot the Lords Prayer without thinking about what I'm saying.

    Think about that, a Pledge, which is a solem oath and a Prayer which is susposed to have been authored by God himself (If you beleave in that sort of thing) being reduced to meaningless noises that students squak out like good little parrots.

    It Amazes me that the strongest foes of manditory recitals aren't the people that strongly beleave in the pledge and/or prayers, yet the Patriots and Fundimentalists are allways ready to have the words that mean so much to them turned into a series of sounds that have little or no meaning to many of the students who are forced to mouth them.

    --
    Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    1. Re:Meaningless Words by mpe · · Score: 2

      Think about that, a Pledge, which is a solem oath and a Prayer which is susposed to have been authored by God himself (If you beleave in that sort of thing) being reduced to meaningless noises that students squak out like good little parrots.

      Wonder how long before the US constitution winds up the same way. Assuming that has not already happened...

    2. Re:Meaningless Words by The+Creator · · Score: 1

      >Wonder how long before the US constitution winds up the same way. Assuming that has not already happened...

      When they added "under god" to the pledge, it provenly already had.

      --

      FRA: STFU GTFO
    3. Re:Meaningless Words by SLi · · Score: 1

      Think about that, a Pledge, which is a solem oath and a Prayer which is susposed to have been authored by God himself

      Huh, never heard about that claim. Probably because I'm not American myself. Do some people really claim this?

    4. Re:Meaningless Words by thales · · Score: 2

      "Huh, never heard about that claim. Probably because I'm not American myself. Do some people really claim this?"

      This isn't just an "American" claim. For most of the last 2000 years Christian doctrine has been that God manifests himself as three personalities, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Jesus is susposed to be the second personality of the Triune Christian God. How someone can hold this belief and also claim to be a Monotheist is something that has never made a lot of sense to me, but that's beside the point. The Christian Bible claims that Jesus (second person in the Triune God) was the Author of the Lords prayer.

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
  311. Take it from a 32nd degree Scottish Rite mason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we were really in charge of the world, we wouldn't be doing such a piss-poor job of it. Oh yeah, the highest degree a Mason can achieve is Master Mason, 3rd Degree. The 32nd Degree is part of a concordant body called the Scottish Rite, also similar to the York Rite.

    See http://www.freemasons.org for more information on what a Freemason is.

  312. Re:EXACTLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " Instead now it is Religion in key control of the government"

    People are in control of the goverment and majority of them happened to be religious.
    What' is wrong with that ?

  313. Re:What sort of lesson is Newdow's daughter learni by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The point is that what she's hearing is the government telling her that there is a God. It's not telling her that there are people who believe in God or gods; it's telling her that the U.S. government supports the idea that there is a God, and that we are somehow beneath him. This is harmful because it violates Newdow's right to direct his daughter's religious education: the government is teaching her about religion, and that is not its place. That's WHY we have the Establishment Clause.

    Nobody's complaining (well, nobody sane anyway) that private individuals don't have a right to preach their religion to people they run into. They have as much right to preach at me as I do to ignore them or preach right back at them. Newdow's daughter will, undoubtedly, encounter myriad religious symbols in her life, but there is no law saying that private individuals cannot wear religious symbols or promote religious belief. There IS, however, a law saying that the GOVERNMENT can't do it.

    Whether you believe in God or not, whether you believe that we really are "one nation under God", it is inappropriate for the government to take that stance.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  314. I'd like to suggest by Greyfox · · Score: 3, Funny
    "One Nation Under Greyfox"

    Has a nice ring to it, doesn't it? I'll need the reins of power turned over to me by next tuesday, though...

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:I'd like to suggest by JonnyCalcutta · · Score: 0

      I prefer
      'I pledge allegiance to the Eye of Thundera'
      but not being American I guess I don't get a say.

    2. Re:I'd like to suggest by rguiu · · Score: 1

      America needs an open source God!!

  315. Re:What is scary is the quote by Sen. Charles Gras by rockwalrus · · Score: 1

    I would love to see all these bought and paid for politicians sent back out into the real world every 4 years.
    So would the lobbyists. New congressthings are cheaper and easier to "influence" and don't have to bother with trying to keep their voting consistant with their previous record (even the general voting public notices when a long-time anti-something votes pro- right after a large "campaign donation").

    If people could vote with their X-Boxes, all those Senators would be gone.
    Of course! They would be replaced by whomever Microsoft programs the X-Boxes to elect. Very convenient. I'm sure we'd get some great, distiguished lawmakers that way. Gives "Microsoft tax" a whole new meaning!

    --


    Rockwalrus

    The sleep of reason produces monsters -- Francisco Goya
  316. Yeah, you saved them from themselves. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just like you saved the south east asians, south and central americans, and are currently saving the muslims.
    Honestly, the world would be a much better place if Americans had bigger penises.

  317. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
    Er, it's not a coincidence that Hitler and Stalin arose in socialist countries

    Absolutism can arise in any country. Hitler's National Socialist Party was the other end of the political spectrum from the socialists and used fear of socialism and communism as a principle plank. In fact until the Nazis burned down the Reichstag to create a pretext for locking up the Communist deputies and thus giving Hitler a sufficient majority to pass the enabling act the Nazi party advertised itself as an anti-socialist party and kept the anti-semitism stuff rather more quiet.

    In any case the party name was not choosen by Hitler. The Nazi party was formed long before Hitler joined and was a pretty obscure party whose platform and leadership Hitler pretty soon side-lined.

    Given the current situation in the US in which people are held without trial, the government talks openly of bypassing the courts with military tribunals and the President is 'elected' on a minority of the vote after going to the supreme court to stop the votes being counted it is probably time to recognize that liberty, democracy and freedom are being protected in the US with about the same dilligence that Anderssen audited the books of Enron, Worldcom and Waste Management.

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  318. What about the Star spangled banner and the war? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I didn't know this was such a hot button issue. I just chose to be silent during the Pledge and I happen to be a Christian that doesn't mind the God part. I'm a loyal American, I love the country and still believe it to be among the most free in the world but my allegience goes as far as my freedoms do, if they start to take them then I'm more than willing to go elsewhere. I see no point in a pledge about that. Now forcing kids to say, very uncool but in the current climate just saying it at all seems like a non-issue compared to some of the crazy stuff going on. I can't believe that this is even interesting when you have the executive branch selecting American citizens and detaining them without council for war crimes that they haven't even committed! Sure, I want the government to stay the hell away from my church and the churches of others but a pledge that's only said in a handful of schools anymore that says "one nation under God" seems like nothing when you have an executive branch fighting an undeclaired war against enemies that it picks at will and without evidence that it is giving to the public, arresting American citizens for an indefinite amount of time for crimes of the mind that haven't been committed or taken anywhere past the planning stage, starting a ministry of homeland security with a huge budget that is supposed to replace some of the duties of the FBI. Finger printing people because of the country they are from and because of their religion and skin color. Some of the stuff is scary, we're on deck to become the East Germany of the 21st century if we aren't careful.


    For the record, the Star Spangled Banner also mentions how the motto of the US is "In God we trust" in the 3 or 4th verse. We should probably petition the court to change that also.

  319. Two points by ffej32 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First of all, if everything of this manner that contains any reference to God is to become unconstitutional, as the trend seems to be, shouldn't the Decleration of Independence, which contains the words "God" and "creator", be next on the chopping block? If this is so, do we go back to being a British colony?

    A bit more seriously, many may argue that removing the phrase "under God" will fix the whole "establishment of religion" thing. It seems to me, though, that all that is really happening is that one groups of people's way of seeing the world is being thrown out in favor of a different group. What religion really comes down to is how a person views the world. The act of throwing out this phrase simply replaces the worldview of those who believe in a God (statistically the vast majority in this country) with the worldview of those who do not believe in a God. In the end all that is accomplished is a replacement, rather than a removal, of ideals.

  320. The problem with Atheists (and Christians)... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...they're just too damned pig headed.

    Really though, all but a few atheist that I have ever met has been a bull headed snot. The attitude taken is "I'm right, your stupid, and fuck you all". It's the angry atheist, mad that the world chooses to believe in something that he has no evidence to disprove. Too many times they are so busy attempting to prove a point to actually sit and listen and soak anything in.

    Now replace "atheist" and "disprove" to "christian" and "prove". Here let me help you...

    Really though, all but a few christian that I have ever met has been a bull headed snot. The attitude taken is "I'm right, your stupid, and fuck you all". It's the angry christian, mad that the world chooses to believe in something that he has no evidence to prove. Too many times they are so busy attempting to prove a point to actually sit and listen and soak anything in.

    Both have their "passions" - misguided, single-minded, ignorant to one degree or the other, defiant, and convinced that their way is it.

    For myself, for my children, for today I am convinced there is a God. Today I celebrate that belief as a Christian and attempt to bring my fellow Christians back to what we should be. I attempt to get some of my compatriots to use their brain power. Unfortunately many are sufficiently happy to continue to repeat things that someone else taught them (incorrectly), happy to repeat the doctrine and literature put forth by theives, liars, and hypocrits.

    I've taught my children as I practice - at school, at work, in public, noone can take God away from you should you choose to believe. Take away the pledge, the money, school prayer, christian literature handed out, crosses, etc - doesn't matter. My son knows that should, he choose to do so, he can pray eyes open mouth shut, no outward sign of prayer - prayer is between he and God and he need not shout or bother others to have a private conversation.

    Not one single Christian in the Bible was persecuted after they chased someone down to hand out a tract, or for visitation, or for standing on the corner yelling at people about how they were going to hell if they didn't repent. They all died or got tortued by just being. They chose to believe a certain way, they decided to teach people in the same manner - quietly, politely, humbly. Later Christians created the frenetic "CONVERT EVERYONE" "SAVE THEM FROM THEMSELVES" movements - the Cruisades, the Spanish Inquisition, Evangelism, etc. Modern Christians in the US know nothing of persecution, they assume that the things they've felt entitled to for so long equate to having the "right" to do as they wish. Many of of the "rights" that some Christians complain about having lost or "might" lose, they never even act upon. Many of the practices taken on by modern Christianity spring from an almost masochistic "PERSECUTE ME" attitude. Almost as if the culture of Christianity needs something to anchor to to say "see we told you, all those evil people want to keep us down".

    Many of the atheists I've met come from religiously strict homes. By the time the chld has grown to adulthood they've become disillusioned about what spirituality and belief is supposed to be. Some are sure that the facts that science has provided them is the proof that God doesn't exist. Some simply use the science to hide behind and to mask their anger at a God that has "left them confused" or "betrayed them". Very few are just quietly resolute and attempt to politely, humbly teach their belief.

    Just my two cents... FLAME ON!

  321. Dear Outraged Senators by KagakuNinja · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I know you feel the need to demonstrate how positively furious you are at this ruling, and even now, are contemplating constutional amendments. Perhaps your legislative energies can be better spent dealing with more pressing matters, to wit: Al-Qaeda, executive branch attacks on the rights of American citizens, our spiraling budget deficit, and the middle east crisis. Thank you.

    Concerned Citizen

    1. Re:Dear Outraged Senators by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      And don't forget about dealing with the economy and the people behind things like the Enron and WorldCom debacles.

      All of those sound better than getting your hands into Establishing Religion just to make sure you look good to your Constituents.

      Of course i'm not sure if i would rather think that they're just vote-grubbing, or that they acutally _believe_ that "after the events of 9/11" it would be a challenge to our "American cultural heritage" to threaten the "under god" bit.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  322. Please reconsider by alienmole · · Score: 2
    Backing down from your beliefs because you're afraid of other people's intolerance is not a good thing.

    What you're suggesting is at the opposite extreme from what e.g. Rosa Parks did by refusing to allow a white passenger to take her seat on the bus.

    This court decision is a big step forward, and a sorely needed one. If you simply sit back and allow religious zealotry to drive the national agenda, especially in this time of reduced rationality, I can guarantee you that you won't like the results.

  323. Wow, I get to refute Pascal's Wager *again*. by Wntrmute · · Score: 2

    Just for a minute consider, what if your wrong. I know I will fair a lot better if I'm wrong than you will if you are.

    What if you're wrong, and the Muslims are correct? Or the Jews? Or the Hindus? Ancient Greeks, Babylonians, or Egyptians?

    That's leaving aside that if there is a god, I'm betting he's clever enough (omnipotence and all that) to see through me if I'm just pretending. Beliefs aren't something you can just up and change. Atheists can't just wake up and say "I'll beleive in god today" any more than a Christian can wake up and say they've decided to worship Ra.

    1. Re:Wow, I get to refute Pascal's Wager *again*. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      any more than a Christian can wake up and say they've decided to worship Ra.

      ra! ra! shish boom ba!

      p.s. im christian

  324. w00t! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    w00t!

  325. It's a matter of choice by TheRedHorse · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'll probably get modded down for this because I'm sure it's already been said but here it is:

    The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution: "Article [I.] Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." A little history on the pledge:

    The pledge was first written by Francis Bellamy in 1892. He was a baptist minister and a christian socialist. Orginally it wasn't a law, just a tradition, the first pledge didn't include the words "under god". Those words were added in 1954 by the U.S. Congress after protests to add "under god" by a christian group called Knights of Columbus. At this point it became not only a prayer but also a patriotic oath.

    Up until 1954 when Congress got involved the pledge wasn't supported by the government at all, it was a tradition spread by the American Legion and the Daughters of the American Revolution. But when Congress got involved then it became a constitutional issue but was passed with out conflict.

    Although it did "pass" the Congress as in they did vote on it, it became a "public oath" not a law therefore excluding it from the constitutional question because the First Amendment specifies making a "law" for official state religion.

    It was passed in an effort to stop communism because as per marxist doctrine communist states are officially atheist, as in, any religion is outlawed.

    But the key questions, does it support christian beliefs? Yes, of couse, it is a christian prayer written by a christian and passed by a government largely made up of people who claim to be christians elected by a christian majority of citizens. Is is unconstitutional? It depends. The supreme court will probably say no when it is appealed to them just as to not create controversy and divide within the people.

    It's really a matter of choice though, I personally see nothing wrong with it because it isn't a law and no one is making you say it. But's it's always going to be straight down the middle, atheists will say one thing christians will say another, jews another, buddists another. Doesn't matter which group you pick everyone will say something different.

    No matter what you do you won't make everyone happy, and someone will just say that taking "under god" out of the pledge is also unconstitutional because the First amendment also says that the government can make no law "prohibiting the free exercise of a religion".

    So it all comes down to what a individual chooses but this is true to nearly every issue I can think of.

    For note, I am a christian although I can't stand organized religion, it disgusts me. Mainly because of the division between catholics and protestants etc... Each group trys to say that your way or christianity is wrong becaus it's not their way.

    I think everyone should have the right to chose to have a religion or not have a religion and then chose to practice their religion any way they see fit. Also they shouldn't pressure their belief's on anyone else who doesn't want it. Have I always followed this guidelines? No. Should I have? Yes.

    That's what I think at the moment, if you disagree that's your right and I hope you will post in this forum with your side of the issue.

  326. Christianity is child abuse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I wish religious followers would leave children alone
    Modern Christendom is nothing more than a set of deep-cutting neuroses and sexual hangups passed along on threat of eternal supernatural torment and given absolute faith by those so busy grinding their unholy crotches against the Book they wouldn't recognize a Deity if She crawled up their ass.

    Such a silly meme would die under its own weight if society didn't condone abusive tactics used to brainwash children with it. Instead 9 out of 10 Americans are damaged by that awful nonsense and the rich get richer, arguably as a direct result of going-through-the-motions Christianity. I pray that the Lord and Lady will mend these poor souls.

  327. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
    Er, it's not a coincidence that Hitler and Stalin arose in socialist countries

    The pledge of allegiance was originally written by the socialist clergyman Francis Bellamy.

    The phrase 'under god' was added because the pledge sounded like the loyalty oaths uttered by 'godless communists

    --
    Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
    Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  328. One reason is probably because... by Liberal+Mafia · · Score: 1

    ...Americans seem to have real trouble with abstract intellectual concepts. Physical symbols, such as flags, are much easier for us to grasp. It's the same mentality that wears crosses for "protection against evil" or that confuses statues of gods with the deities they represent.

    It doesn't help that many Americans are so anti-intellectual, either openly or half-consciously. They're very suspicious of people who "think too much" or who can grasp complex ideas -- note how Al Gore was mocked as a "policy wonk" because he actually had some grasp of the issues and didn't rely on mindless slogans.

    It's probably too much effort, and a little scary for these people to actually read the Bill of Rights and the Constitution (and if they read it without being told what it was, they might denounce it as "communistic" or "liberal"). They'd rather revere a piece of brightly colored cloth and invest it with all manner of mystical powers and significance -- thus the flag worship.

    Ironically, the Pledge of Allegiance was written by a socialist, Francis Bellamy. See http://www.vineyard.net/vineyard/history/pledge.ht m for the details.

  329. Re:EXACTLY! by AnalogBoy · · Score: 2

    I feel compelled to dignify that with a response, even though i know i shouldn't.

    Nobody should have undue control over anothers life, at least in the aspect of what is morally right or wrong. That said, to quote oliver wendell holmes, my right to swing my fist ends where your nose begins. Interpret as you will.

  330. Repeal the Declaration of Independence? by jnd3 · · Score: 1

    What's next for the Ninth Circuit Court? That awful Declaration of Independence says, "When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation." And it also says, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights." And, still one more time, " We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by the Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States." By their impeccable logic, the Declaration of Independence references a supernatural being at least three times, and is therefore un-Constitutional. Does that mean I'll have to start drinking tea at 4pm every day again? Ack!

    1. Re:Repeal the Declaration of Independence? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Really nice but irrelevant as the Constitution, with that pesky bill of rights, is the basis for our government and not the Declaration.

    2. Re:Repeal the Declaration of Independence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the declaration of independence is not anykin of legal document, it just says why the early american rebeled and said fuck you to the king of england

    3. Re:Repeal the Declaration of Independence? by chazzf · · Score: 2

      I would like to draw everyone's attention to "Nature's God", "Creator", and "Supreme Judge". These phrases are non-specific. They imply a superior power of some sort, but they do not imply the standard Judeo-Christian God. Thomas Jefferson, who wrote the Declaration of Independence, was a Deist (they believe in a non-specific Creator but don't pray to him), so this seems entirely appropriate.

      However, the phrase "under God", was inserted into the Pledge during the Eisenhower Administration as a bulwark against atheist Communism. Hardly the same thing.

      ~Chazzf

      --
      No statement is true, not even this one.
  331. My Expirience by sxe_p06 · · Score: 0

    When I was in high school, I too refused to stand for the pledge, it was mostly becasue of the fact that I was a "rebel" and that was enough for me. However, For this, i was kicked out of class, and eventually sent home from school. That evening my mother called our attourney and had him write a note to school demanding I be allowed back into class with no persecution or discrimination based on my reluctancy, and so went. My reccomendation to anyone expiriencing this problem, is consult a lawyer, they are happy to have such an easy lawsuit against a school and get the publicity. And you teachers tend not to mess with you afterwards. When I become a parent, I can only hope my child decides to excersive theri rights where they feel fit. Isn't that after-all, what america is all about???

    (Sorry for Ameri-centric, but look at the damn headline :-))

    --
    -- p06 "On religious wars: They're essentially wars over whoo's imaginary friend is better"
  332. Re:While the ideals are good, They should not be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "How about pledging to not knowingly hurt, main and deceive other people. That's all.
    "
    .. and then you proceded to insult/hurt millions of people who had nothing to do with pedophilia ...

    "The Catholics have lapsed into poedophilia and benign indifference on ten lousy commandements and seven deadly sins. "

  333. Won't be upheld by the Supreme Court by turbomonkey2k · · Score: 1

    We can all feel safe knowing that the supreme court will not uphold this insane ruling.

    1. Re:Won't be upheld by the Supreme Court by gerardrj · · Score: 1

      I personally feel rather UNsafe in thinking that the USSC will override this decision, and thus re-instate the illegal actions of the President and Congress in the 50s.

      It is the job of the courts to adjudicate law, not uphold popular opinion.

      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    2. Re:Won't be upheld by the Supreme Court by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Whats really insane is why the pledge as it stands wasn't struck down long, long ago.

  334. No on all accounts, and here's why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you look at the context of what makes news on Slashdot, you'll find mostly stories about technology, and the rest about rights online related to the exchange of information. This news story is on here for one reason and only one reason - because the editors of Slashdot are militant atheists who insist on pushing their views of religion knowing that most of the people here are atheists or agnostics as has been demonstrated time and again.

    One could argue "well, what about the story on 9/11?" That story is partly about a major technology infrastructure problem created by terrorists. Stretching this to say that children of Slashdot readers are affected by this is like saying news items about Toyota Corollas should be posted because a lot of Slashdotters own Corollas. This isn't what this site is supposed to be about.

    It is obvious that, not only is there no journalistic integrity, but the constant bias that pervades the moderation of comments towards atheist viewpoints instead of balance is ridiculous. Of course, I wonder how many of the SlashSheep(TM) realize that this is actually the same form of indoctrination they accuse educators of in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance with the reference "under God" in it...

    P.S. If you have any guts you should mod it up.

  335. To Everyone reading this.... by ogar572 · · Score: 0

    Think about what the pledge, our flag, our veterans, and the USA stands for. Then think to yourself what the world would be like. Think about the freedoms we have, the rights that my grandparents, my father, my uncles, and my friedns fought in wars for. The gifts and help that we give to other countries. Are you not proud to be an American, if you are one? And if your country recieves any help from us, do you like that help? I am dam proud to be an American. I work for the largest veterans organization in the world, the American Legion, and I would like all of you who are against protecting what reflects America to tell them what you think.

    1. Re:To Everyone reading this.... by slim-t · · Score: 1
      I am not proud to be an American - although I am very happy to be an American.

      I would be proud to be an American if this ruling causes schools to stop forcing children to say there is a God. I would be even more proud to be an American is we would stop fighting wars and occupying foreigns lands to have our precious oil.

    2. Re:To Everyone reading this.... by ogar572 · · Score: 0

      The schools are not forcing children to say "under god". When I say the Pledge, I don't say "under god", I just pause. If people would not f*ck with us, or mess with our interests, then we would not need to fight. And if the leftist stopped being crazy we would not have to get oil from other countries, we could get it right here at home w/o the Alaskan wildlife thingie ( I can't remeber the name of it right now)

  336. easy by GePS · · Score: 1

    The same way we reward any people who make it big: severance package worth few hundred million in stocks.

  337. Re:What sort of lesson is Newdow's daughter learni by Ankhorite · · Score: 1
    Hyacinthus said: What kind of lesson is it for her to learn, that a federal court has decided that she doesn't even have to _hear_ something she doesn't like, or that her father doesn't like?

    I'm reminded of the imbroglio in San Diego a few years ago, when some atheist group or other tried to get the Mt. Soledad cross torn down. I could respect their arguments, and yet still think, "What a bunch of yahoos! It's a cross. There are lots of crosses around. Deal with it."
    For anyone who missed it, here's the story on the Mt. Soledad cross.

    Crosses on your own land, your own neck, your own clothes, your own schools -- fine. Crosses on public land maintained at taxpayer expense -- MY expense -- not fine at all. Not constitutional, either.

    As to the argument that Newdow's daughter should get used to being forced to listen to other children dutifully praying a government prayer by government order -- oh? you weren't thinking of it like that? Please do.

    Then you'll see why Newdow objects to her being an unwilling audience as the other kids drone through this formal declaration of religious belief led and supervised at public expense in a schoolroom financed at public expense, when all of them -- Newdow's daughter included -- should be learning something worthwhile out of the public education curriculum instead of whatever it is forced prayer is supposed to teach.

    The lesson Newdow's daughter should get from the court decision is that there is still hope for religious freedom in this country, even though you often have to fight for it. The lesson is that patriotism isn't demonstrated by forced and phony public prayers. When you use the tools the founders gave us to preserve the rights they guaranteed us, that is defending your country. That is patriotism. That's what young Ms. Newdow knows about her dad now.
  338. This country might have less atheists... by Vegan+Pagan · · Score: 2

    ...if our leaders didn't try to mandate religion. That's something they should consider.

  339. Proving the point by alienmole · · Score: 2
    You prove the point by your self-centered attitude that the traditional American way of life happens to be *your* way. Your views are only encouraged by unconstitutional acts such as the one corrected today by the Ninth Circuit.

    It's worth noting that the original, Christian author of the Pledge of Allegiance deliberately left out any reference to gods. As a Christian, perhaps you should take a lesson from Francis Bellamy's book, about tolerance and avoiding alienation and opression of people with views different than yours. You've probably never stood in school and been forced to recite material from a religion not your own - try to imagine that and imagine how you would feel about it.

    The "Establishment of Religion" clause is not being used to suppress all religion, it's being used to suppress all state sponsorship and imposition of religion, which was the case with the Pledge, and which is exactly the original intent of the clause.

    As for the non-religious part of the Pledge, I am not one of those who has a problem with it. However, I do think there should be more to patriotism than indoctrination - true education would be preferable. Indoctrination implies that the audience, the citizens of which a country should be able to be proud, is not capable of reaching the right conclusions on its own about the merits of their country.

    1. Re:Proving the point by duck_prime · · Score: 1
      You prove the point by your self-centered attitude that the traditional American way of life happens to be *your* way. Your views are only encouraged by unconstitutional acts such as the one corrected today by the Ninth Circuit.

      Please spare me the insults. In a way, though, "self-centeredness" is exactly what I'm talking about. I claim it is appropriate to prefer one's natal culture to others'. Moral relativism as practised today boils down to: "Every culture is unique and special except my own, which sucks." Read Slashdot, you'll see plenty of that attitude.

      My basic claim is that the government should promote the majority culture.

      This is not something I can prove mathematically; as so often happens, arguments run aground on the combatants' emotionally-held beliefs, like your (presumed) belief that preferring one culture is bad.

      I'm prepared to save a lot of time by acknowledging that I'm unlikely to convince you, and vice versa.
    2. Re:Proving the point by alienmole · · Score: 2
      My basic claim is that the government should promote the majority culture.

      My point, which I stated too personally, is that you only take this perspective because you happen to believe that the majority culture is your culture. You're not basing this on any principle other than self-interest and, in essence, a happy coincidence (for you).

      The United States was founded on some principles which were designed to allow people with differing self-interests to coexist reasonably peacefully. I like to think that if the situation were reversed - as the judges suggest in their decision (quoted below) - that my position would still be the same, whereas it's clear that yours would change.

      The judges wrote:

      "A profession that we are a nation "under God" is identical, for Establishment Clause purposes, to a profession that we are a nation "under Jesus," a nation "under Vishnu," a nation "under Zeus," or a nation "under no god," because none of these professions can be neutral with respect to religion."

      If you haven't already, I suggest you read the decision from at least page 9122 onwards, since it provides arguments for the position that are far better than anything you'll read on /.

    3. Re:Proving the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My basic claim is that the government should promote the majority culture.

      This is so ignorant I have to believe you're a troll.

      The very sad thing is that you are very likely NOT part of the "majority culture" (whatever that is) and would be the first one to cry if the majority twisted your arm on shit you don't like.

  340. Bzzzzt. by HopeOS · · Score: 3, Informative
    Neither Jefferson nor Franklin were Christians. Jefferson in particular had many choice and uncomplimentary things to say about Christians. I suggest you check your facts. What is known is that Jefferson had an appreciation for elements of the morality of Jesus Christ; however, he was particularly unimpressed by the mystic elements of the religion as practiced.
    Among the sayings and discourses imputed to him [Jesus] by his biographers, I find many passages of fine imagination, correct morality, and of the most lovely benevolence; and others again of so much ignorance, so much absurdity, so much untruth, charlatanism, and imposture, as to pronounce it impossible that such contradictions should have proceeded from the same being. -Thomas Jefferson, letter to William Short, April 13, 1820
    There is plenty more online.
    -Hope
  341. an unconstitutional dose of reality from Neitzsche by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

    Regarding human nature:
    "Many a man has also cast off his final worth when he cast off the chains of his bondage."
    Frederich Nietzsche, "Also Sprach Zarathustra".

    Also, (quote)
    "Freedom is the province of the strong."
    Frederich Nietzsche, "Beyond Good and Evil"

    just my beliefs, personally. I don't even care if you flame me for it - it's not really going to change a thing.

    --
    C|N>K
  342. Re:doesn't matter Fundie Flamez by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It says that we will rock the fundies into the next dimension with a super-megaton punch to the face!

  343. You did one BIG thing wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Here's the email I just sent out to quite a few people:

    Subject: pledge

    (stop reading if you're the type to complain)"

    Why should I stop reading if I want to complain? You trying to say I shouldn't exercise my First Amendment right to free speech?!?

    You, sir, are a hypocrite in the strictest sense.

  344. US Christians Suck by Aknaton · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that Christians in the US want religious freedom but only for themselves. Do you really think that their defense of the Pledge would be so strong if it was changed to "In Allah we trust"?

    It's just like prayer at high-school graduations. They whine if they are not able to do it but what if the person leading the prayer was Buddist, Islamic, or even a Wicca, for example? I bet that their demand of tolerance would quickly fade.

    And it probably isn't just chance that the peoples the US is most known in history for screwing over (blacks and indians) just happened to be non-christian groups. (Well, until we were done with them, anyway!)

  345. So my question is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, so saying the pledge is illegal now in the moronic butt mining state of California. No longer can public schools force our children to mention the "G" word in class.

    Does the same hold true for faggotry, environmentalism, abortion, etc. All of these things are religious points of view to those that hold them. They proselyte the same as religion and seek converts the same as religion and government passes laws to uphold them all the time.

    Why the double standard here? Why is it okay for 10% of the population to force all this special interest bullshit down our throats and not okay for the christian majority (80+%)of the population to mention the word "God" in school every once in a while?

    I guess the only thing to do in this situation is to pray for all the athiests and their children.

  346. ! Innocent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OBL isn't in trouble for being a religious whacko, he's in trouble for instigating the murder of several thousand innocent people.

    Murderer, yes. Wrong, yes. However, I would not call the people "innocent". They specifically contributed to the American Way, which is far from innocent, which OBL hates.

    I just have to get that straight. Too much news media language going around, too little critical analysis.

    1. Re:! Innocent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm also astonished at the US people who flail around and act like this came out of the blue.

      [O/U]sama did NOT just wake up one morning and think "Today is a good day to kill some people in another country".

      Anybody working in the two towers that day was at work promoting capitalism, greed, and personal wealth - apparently the american way.

  347. Re:thoughts On Eisenhower's "fault" .....hypocrisy by Darren+Winsper · · Score: 2

    Alas, most of the world has to deal with "which of these options is the lesser of two evils" problem at some point in their lives.

  348. The USA is "Under God" - Not Communist by TheCeltic · · Score: 0

    The USA was founded and has risen to power as a "Under God" (not God-Less) nation. Our laws are based on the Judeo-Christian Ten Commandments, our founding fathers were (almost entirely) Christian, the simple fact that this country has been a nation where 90+% of the population profess to being Christian makes it a country "Under God". In a democracy, the MAJORITY decides what is acceptable. In THIS DEMOCRACY, no "established religion" may be forced on the people, but the people CAN (and always have) include religion in society (we are NOT COMMUNISTS--yet). They can also choose to profess (the fact that) America is "One Nation, Under God".

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-= - The Celtic - =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
    1. Re:The USA is "Under God" - Not Communist by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      This has gotta be a troll (but i'm getting suckered into answering anyway)

      Communism does not preclude religion.

      Neither does blithely declaring your religion "protect" you from communism.

      The majority can not decide to take away the consitutionally guaranteed freedoms of a minority.

      Our founding fathers were (almost entirely) diests, not Christians, and had pretty nasty things to say about Christianity.

      Our Founding Fathers dissing Christianity

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  349. This was a good decision by Animats · · Score: 2
    The debate that follows this decision will be painful for many, but it's needed. We've had too much religion in public life under this administration, and it's becoming a real problem internationally.

    The US has historically stayed out of religious wars. The United States was designed to be neutral on religion, primarily to avoid conflicts over it. The founders had direct experience of religion closely tied to government, and strongly rejected that approach. Their reasons were both philosophical and pragmatic, are well documented, and don't need to be repeated here. But if you don't know them, reading the Federalist Papers will be helpful.

    Religious wars are historically tough to settle. The history of the original Crusades covers centuries of dumb decisions. Europe had centuries of wars with religious overtones, and partly for that reason, the main European countries are decidedly more secular than the United States. France, for example, has a majority of nonbelievers, and Britain is getting close.

    The United States currently finds itself peripherally involved in three religious wars. A few decades ago, the US attitude would have been "a pox on both your houses". Today, the administration's pro-Christian bias is making unnecessary enemies. We're getting drawn into the endless religious wars of other countries. Mostly countries which can't build a government that works. That's no coincidence. As Jefferson wrote: "History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil government. This marks the lowest grade of ignorance of which their civil as well as religious leaders will always avail themselves for their own purposes." --Thomas Jefferson to Alexander von Humboldt, 1813.

    Jefferson on religion is always worth reading. If you haven't read Jefferson on this, do so now.

  350. Thomas Jefferson wouldn't agree. by copponex · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "No religious reading, instruction or exercise, shall be prescribed or practiced [in the elementary schools] inconsistent with the tenets of any religious sect or denomination." --Thomas Jefferson: Elementary School Act, 1817. ME 17:425

    "The clergy, by getting themselves established by law and ingrafted into the machine of government, have been a very formidable engine against the civil and religious rights of man." --Thomas Jefferson to Jeremiah Moor, 1800.

    "Religion is a subject on which I have ever been most scrupulously reserved. I have considered it as a matter between every man and his Maker in which no other, and far less the public, had a right to intermeddle." --Thomas Jefferson to Richard Rush, 1813.

    I think we should expect nothing less than absolute, complete, and without-a-doubt separation of church and state. If you want to leave the door open for someone as intolerant as Falwell to lead his sheep into the New World Order (which should be exceptional at making him boatloads of money), be my guest.

    -Dean

  351. I know what they should change it to by YourFavoriteBandSux · · Score: 2, Funny

    They should just change "Under God" with "You're sooo good-lookin'". :)

    --


    ---
    Two rights don't make a wrong, but three rights make a left. -Me
  352. What Judeo-Christian basis? by Daetrin · · Score: 1
    the problem with abolishing the pledge will lead to the abolition of anything that includes the same concept of the country being under God. the declaration of independednce says "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights", and as you mentioned, money says "in God we Trust." it says that in the entrance to the Senate Assembly hall, too. the top of the Washington monument says "Praise the Lord!" many important documents relevant to the foundation of the government would be rendered unconstitutional, such as the Gettysberg Address, among other things. court oaths would be changed: "Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, so help you God?" many government proceedings which are opened with prayer would be restructured. the circuit courts which open with "God help this honorable court" or something like that would change their proceedings.

    I would say that "Creator" is much less of a specific term than "God." Although it does indeed indicate spiritual leanings, it does not in any way necessarily indicate the judeo-christian religion.

    Although it does in some sense indicate a belief in a generic higher power, i far prefer it to the alternative that Eisenhower stuck into the Pledge of Allegiance. If push comes to shove, i'll say that my Creator was whatever star or stars that fussed together the carbon and oxygen that make up my body.

    this is a hell of a lot deeper than anyone here seems to realize. Judeo-Christian faith is the basis which the government was built on. it is the history on which the nation was founded. you can't simply strike it out. i don't think they'd let you.

    Wow, quite authoritative aren't you? And who wouldn't let me?

    "As the government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion"
    -from Article 11 of the Treaty of Tripoli, approved by Congress and signed by John Adams

    "I have examined all the known superstitions of the word, and I do not find in our particular superstition of Christianity one redeeming feature. They are all alike founded on fables and mythology. Millions of innocent men, women and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined and imprisoned. What has been the effect of this coercion? To make one half the world fools and the other half hypocrites; to support roguery and error all over the earth."
    -Thomas Jefferson

    "I would not dare to so dishonor my Creator God by attaching His name to that book (the Bible)."
    -Thomas Paine

    Athiesm Awareness
    Not a Christian Nation
    Treaty of Tripoli

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  353. Seperation of Church and State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seperation of Church and State, need i say more.

    1. Re:Seperation of Church and State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please say more. Where does it say seperation of church and state in the constitution? Nowhere.

  354. Holy Bible by KidSock · · Score: 2

    So what about being sworn in by placing your hand on the Bible and swearing to tell the truth?

    1. Re:Holy Bible by YourFavoriteBandSux · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well, if you don't believe in God, you have no morals, so you're going to lie anyway.

      --


      ---
      Two rights don't make a wrong, but three rights make a left. -Me
    2. Re:Holy Bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not required prior to testifying. If you don't want to put your hand on the bible or swear to God, you will be allowed to give an alternate oath.

    3. Re:Holy Bible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not required, originally because it's abhorent to certain Christian religions (Society of Friends ("Quakers") and Seventh Day Adventists, among others) to swear any oath at all. The typical language allows a person to "swear or affirm".

      An early example, pre-dating the founding of the United States, may be seen in the Proceedings of the Maryland Assembly, 8 May to 2 June, 1750:

      ...thee Proprietor, or some other credible Person, take the following Oath (or Affirmation if a Quaker); I A. B. do swear (or if a Quaker affirm)....
      [http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/me gafile/msa/sp eccol/sc2900/sc2908/000001/000046/html/am46--454.h tml]

      Some "Quakers" go further, refusing even to affirm.
      [http://winningthevote.org/RDeGarmo.html]

      Franklin Pierce choose to affirm rather than swear, the Oath of Office when inagurated U.S. President in 1853.
      [http://www.bartleby.com/124/pres29.html but note that you'll have to search for this link from the main Bartleby's page, as Bartleby disables deep linking.]

  355. It's "Respecting ESTABLISHMENT of religion"... by TheCeltic · · Score: 0

    The law covers the establishment of religion, it doesn't say that religion is "un-American". As many would like us to think.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-= - The Celtic - =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
  356. Only that the State should leave the Church alone. by TheCeltic · · Score: 0

    Just that the State is supposed to leave the Church alone. It is not to prevent the Church from being part of the state. Think about it.. the people who wrote the document swore on the BIBLE that they would support it, not on some "non-religious" book.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-= - The Celtic - =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
  357. 50 States, under Fed control, ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    The 9th fed court ruled right. The US allegiance should read
    '... 50 States, under Fed control, ...' I hope the fed SC passes
    on reviewing the decision. Having 'under God' in there is like the team
    prayer before a game by both teams, is God gonna bless one over the
    other!

  358. Church of England and the pilgrims, quakers, etc. by coyote-san · · Score: 2

    It's much stronger than that. Many early American colonists from the United Kingdom were not members of the Church of England - they were Pilgrims (Anabaptists?), Quakers (Society of Friends), etc.

    Under British law, they could not work for the crown. They could not attend university. (Remember, until recently the *only* degree granted by British universities was a Doctorate of Divinity with concurrent ordination in the Church of England. That's why it was the Rev. Charles Darwin who came up with those radical ideas regarding human evolution.) They were excluded from almost all aspects of public life.

    The framers of the US Constitution were very much aware of this recent history (to them), and they were emphantic in their intent that the US never require membership in a state religion to hold office or otherwise participate in social life. Some states (e.g., Georgia) have clauses in their state constitutions requiring that all officeholders be Christians in good standing (whatever that means), but these clauses haven't been considered enforceable for many generations.

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
  359. Despots force loyalty oaths. by uncoveror · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Many people are upset that the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court Of Appeals has ruled that a California law requiring school children to recite the Pledge Of Allegiance is unconstitutional. It is a law that respects an establishment of religion. Most people who object to the pledge would be happy if the "Under God" line, added in 1954, were removed. When President Eisenhower signed the law adding that line, he wrote, "Millions of our schoolchildren will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our nation and our people to the Almighty." This was clearly respecting an establishment of religion, the court ruled. There are other problems with the pledge.

    Adding "Under God" was a cold war reaction to the "godless communists" of the former Soviet Union. The pledge forced our children to make a political statement, as well as a religious one.

    Here is the biggest problem with the Pledge Of Allegiance: it is a loyalty oath. A free nation should not force anyone to swear a loyalty oath. That is something despots do.

    Some religious Americans might also have a problem with the pledge, on the grounds that it constitutes idolatry. Children are made to turn and face a symbol, put their hands over their hearts, and swear an oath to that symbol. To many, this is just as much an act of idolatry as it would be if the symbol were a golden calf.

    I support this court ruling. No one should be forced to swear loyalty to a symbol. No one should be forced to swear loyalty in a free nation.

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  360. Killing people unacceptable? by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    Why is that?

    It's totally acceptable in many cultures...heck, eating people even acceptable.

    What if someone practices a religion in which the religious rite of passage required the eating of another person not of the same religion. Should the U.S. Government intervene or wait there is a seperation of church and state...can't interfere.

    Secondly, you all are ignorant who are relying on the "seperation of church and state" please find it...uh, what doesn't exist.

    Okay, now the part about the U.S. Government not establishing a religion. Guess what, it was all in regards to Christianity.

    Do away with the God clause and Americans have NO rights.

    The rights given us in the U.S. were those that were believed to be given by God. If not, then we have no rights...so kiss you arse good-bye.

  361. How Slashdot is like the Torqueville Institute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...headline pimping..." said the Register.

    Dudes, you ought to READ the article before you post your blather. That trash about "unconstitutional" is, well, what the Register called those other idiots' PR blather.

    Good to see that Slashdottie is upholding journalistic integrity, or even demonstrating the reading comprehension of a middle schooler.

  362. Re: The founding fathers were not Christian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some were Christian. Some weren't.

    You'll get posts pointing out so-and-so was Christan. Therefore the FFs were Christian. You'll get other posts pointing out so-and-so was NOT Christan. Therefore the FFs were NOT Christian.

    Your basic premise that the country was NOT founded on Christian principles is accurate, however.

  363. Forced Pledge of Allegiance by RobinH · · Score: 1

    Actually I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.

    Being a 'foreigner' (to you), I don't think it's right to interject my opinion as a "right/wrong" type of argument, so let me just right down a few random thoughts to ponder:

    As a ritual, this "Pledge of Allegiance" of yours certainly sounds like something that Saddam Hussein would make all the children in Iraq do. It doesn't sound like a very good method of promoting critical thinking in your children, though it might promote a sense of unity, I admit.

    I don't know... I was just hit with the realization in the last few days/weeks that the rest of the western world used to see the U.S. as the "good" guys, but that view is rapidly changing. It seems like the U.S. is far too self-righteous to be the world leader it sees itself as. Perhaps the only future for America is as a bully.

    Personally, I'm hoping that the E.U. (European Union) will step forward and form the building blocks of the first world government. Oh well, we can hope, right?

    Okay, getting waayyy OT. Sorry.

    --
    "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    1. Re:Forced Pledge of Allegiance by Symbiosis · · Score: 1

      I, for one, am not hoping for a world government. I'm all about everyone getting along. I'm all about world peace. But I'm also all about everyone being able to do their own thing. I don't think we need a world government, I think we need a world where people can get along, but one government... nah, I'll pass on the one group of people ruling the world. You don't like the US government? That's fine, you don't have to live here. Maybe I don't like the EU. So why should I have to live under the EU? (BTW, I don't have anything against you guys, just making a point.)

      Choice is good. Diversity is even better. :-)

      --

      -------------------------------------------
      I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells.
      -- Dr. Seuss
  364. Judge has this one right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It is official; Netcraft confirms: *BSD is dying

    One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.

    You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.

    FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.

    Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.

    OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.

    Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.

    All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are vry dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.

    Fact: *BSD is dying

  365. A sad state of affairs by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

    Like all things, it goes in cycles. The harder you push when the pendilum is going your way, the harder it will swing back in 20 years when things are'nt on your side.

    Give the Christians their pledge. Otherwise, don't be surprised in 20 years when they get so fed up you suddenly can't find a job if your an athiest.

    --
    The Internet is generally stupid
  366. Idolatry by coyote-san · · Score: 2

    It's interesting to speak with a true conservative/fundamentalist, not the twits you see on TV.

    What you noticed is actually a serious concern - the pledge, the "flag descration" bills, etc., all add up to a single thing in their mind. Idolatry. It's not a golden calf at the base of Mt. Nebo, but the mindset, the fixation on a concrete symbol instead of the abstract concepts behind it, are the same.

    Unfortunately, when they speak up they get dumped on by both sides. Many liberals have also been brainwashed into believing that they have to reject all religious arguments on principal, instead of accepting that the rationale may seem a bit odd to us but the conclusions are the same so why worry?

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
  367. Forced Pledges are unconstitutional not to mention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a farce.

    Does it make any sense to force someone to pledge allegiance to a flag that supposedly stands for freedom among other things?

    Religious zealots might even say this is worshiping the flag. Inspite of the origins of the pledge.

  368. "ACLJ Calls... Ruling... "Faulty and Flawed..." by Spudwrench · · Score: 1

    Here's a quick responce to the ruling by the ACLJ. Personally, I don't have a problem with any part of the Pledge of Allegiance... but apparently a lot of people do. Go figure. It isn't like anyone over the age of 14 is required to say it every day. And, no, I do not believe it (the Pledge) sets a precidence that the Government is "pro-God" and/or anti-"every-other-'religeon'-that-isn't-judeo-chri stian".

    Anyway, here's the story... http://www.aclj.org/news/pressreleases/020626_pled ge.asp

    ACLJ Calls Appeals Court Ruling on Pledge of Allegiance Faulty and Flawed Legal Reasoning

    June 26, 2002

    (Washington, DC) - The American Center for Law and Justice, an international public interest law firm, said today a decision by a federal appeals court that declares the Pledge of Allegiance unconstitutional is faulty and flawed legal reasoning and should be overturned.

    "This is one of the most absurd legal rulings of our time," said Jay Sekulow, Chief Counsel of the ACLJ. "To suggest that school children who want to recite the Pledge of Allegiance can no longer do so because it violates the constitution represents faulty and flawed legal reasoning on the part of the appeals court. The finding that the phrase 'under God' that was added to the words 'one nation' in the Pledge by an act of Congress in 1954 is an endorsement of religion is very troubling. The appeals court missed the mark and is re-writing law instead of interpreting it. The recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance - including the phrase 'One nation under God' - is part of who we are as Americans. This is just another attempt to remove any mention of God from the public arena. We will work aggressively to make sure this ruling gets overturned."

    A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit today ruled that the phrase "under God" that was added to the Pledge by Congress in 1954 violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.

    The ACLJ is an international public interest law firm specializing in constitutional law and its web site address is www.aclj.org.

    --
    peace, spudwrench
    1. Re:"ACLJ Calls... Ruling... "Faulty and Flawed..." by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      And, no, I do not believe it (the Pledge) sets a precidence that the Government is "pro-God" and/or anti-"every-other-'religeon'-that-isn't-judeo-chri stian". Funny that, _i've_ noticed a pretty strong judeo-christian bent in this country, especially looking at the responses to this issue on Congress.org.

      A lot of people seem to think that it is unamerican to even think about removing the "under god" bit from the Pledge, which to me is the best example of why it _should_ be removed.

      Re: the article you're quoting, the ACLJ made a pretty serious error there. The court didn't say that "school children who want to recite the Pledge of Allegiance can no longer do so because it violates the constitution." The court just said that schools requiring children to recite it is unconsitutional. A child can, on their own, exercising their right to free speach, swear allegiance to the flag, god, christ, allah, yahweh, satan, zeus, odin, or whoever or whatever else they please.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    2. Re:"ACLJ Calls... Ruling... "Faulty and Flawed..." by Spudwrench · · Score: 1

      I'm not a student of law or the government, so I can't claim to be very knowledgable in these areas. Therefore, I will definately conceed that a lot of polititians have a "pretty strong judeo-christian bent in this country". But I do not believe that that makes the overall government or it's laws "pro-God" and/or anti-"every-other-'religeon'-that-isn't-judeo-chri stian".

      Re: the article you're quoting, the ACLJ made a pretty serious error there. The court didn't say that "school children who want to recite the Pledge of Allegiance can no longer do so because it violates the constitution." The court just said that schools requiring children to recite it is unconsitutional. A child can, on their own, exercising their right to free speach, swear allegiance to the flag, god, christ, allah, yahweh, satan, zeus, odin, or whoever or whatever else they please.

      I saw this error before I posted this and fully expected someone to pick it up sonner or later. You noticed it first. The ACLJ did indeed make a rather bad (i.e. stupid) statement there. Nothing else can be said. It was dumb.

      On the other hand, wouldn't it be polite and "politically correct" to allow the teacher to ask those that want to stand for and recite the current "Pledge of Allegiance" to do so and for those that do not to simply remain seated and silent (out of respect to their classmates)? And , if a child and parent request, for a child to be allowed to make their "Pledge" to whomever/whatever they wish and that those who would rather not recite that "Pledge" to also simply remain seated and silent (again, out of respect to their classmates)?

      But from there, where does it end? Do we need to allow all students to recite their own version of their "Pledge"? Or, in the interest of not wasting time with every student's "Pledge" (which could be spent learning), should we just remove the "Pledge of Allegiance" all together?

      Although I favor the "allow everyone to have their 'Pledge'" choice, I would hate to see the "Pledge of Allegiance" removed from the classrooms to avoid the inevitable conflict of "my-child-was-offended-by-who/what-their-child-ple dged-their-allegiance-to". No matter what changes are made to either the "Pledge" itself or in the matter of where it is "required" to recite, someone will be offended. And that would just start this whole process over again.

      --
      peace, spudwrench
  369. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a fabulous troll your post was.... or how fabulously stupid you are. It's impossible to tell.

    Dude, that is my new sig. Thanks!

  370. in gold we trust by Tumbleweed · · Score: 2

    I don't think that's true any longer for U.S. currency, is it? Not that it matters what with the Bush administration's hyper-growth of the national debt (which we're about to default on, btw *sigh*)

    And Republicans consider themselves fiscal _conservatives_? Yeah, don't pay our debts - we'll have plenty of money left over! *cringe*

  371. Actually . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    . . . you are not forced to pledge allegiance to anything if you choose not to, the supreem court decided that. Also, I don't recall the phrase "I pledge allegiance to the United States government" being anywhere in the pledge. You are pledging allegiance to your country when you recite it, that does not require that you agree with every policy of the US government.

    1. Re:Actually . . . by Danse · · Score: 2

      I wonder if anyone explains these things to the little kids that have to recite the pledge everyday. I know they never explained it to me. It was just words that I mostly just mouthed so I wouldn't get singled out or punished.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    2. Re:Actually . . . by ocbwilg · · Score: 2

      Also, I don't recall the phrase "I pledge allegiance to the United States government" being anywhere in the pledge. You are pledging allegiance to your country when you recite it

      The phrase that has you pledging allegiance is "and to the Republic, for which it stands." This is quite clearly not a pledge to a country but a pledge to the government of that country (actually a specific model of government that this country has).

    3. Re:Actually . . . by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      I don't recall the phrase "I pledge allegiance to the United States government" being anywhere in the pledge.

      I pledge allegiance to the flag
      and to the republic for which it stands
      one nation, under bush, blah blah...

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    4. Re:Actually . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...you are not forced to pledge allegiance to anything if you choose not to, the supreem court decided that.

      Oh yes you are. Perhaps it's blatantly illegal, but the vast majority of the time, a kid standing up for their own rights against any adult in school, especially a teacher or staff, loses all rights and is treated as a disobedient slave or worse. The law simply fails to apply except in the very worst abuses...and the adults know this, thus they know they can (and do) usually get away with it. It's an unfortunate side effect of the controls put in place to keep kids from doing dangerous things (which, frankly, they would do if they were in charge - and tend to try anyway).

  372. Parsing the Pledge... by ender- · · Score: 2

    Some of you might find this interesting.

    My gf is a teacher,and this year she had to teach a middle school "communications" class [which was really just an English as a Second Language class].

    After Sept 11th, when patriotism was running rampant, she noticed that the kids were basically mindlessly reciting the pledge each morning.

    Anyway, as one of her assignments, she had her students parse the pledge of allegiance. She had them pick apart every word and phrase, and find out the definition. They they had to re-assemble the pledge in their own words, of what they thought the pledge was saying based on the definitions of the words.

    Turns out most of the students were upset about what the pledge was saying, and ever since then most of them refused to recite the pledge. Even many of the kids from Chrisitan families were not happy about it.

    Anyway, just thought it'd be an interesting, topical story.

    As for me, I'm glad they are finally realizing how stupid it is to recite the Pledge in schools.

    Ender

    1. Re:Parsing the Pledge... by Conrad_Bombora · · Score: 1

      thats very cool.
      i like what she did. if only more teachers could do that.

    2. Re:Parsing the Pledge... by Animats · · Score: 2
      Only American citizens should make the American Pledge of Allegance. If your primary loyalty is to another country, it's improper. I'm surprised it's used in schools at all today, especially in California, which has a huge non-citizen population.

      Admittedly the Pledge is symbolic. But the same issue arises with the oath of allegance required of applicants for U.S. citizenship, which also has a "God clause". That oath has legal teeth; people who've made it and then violate it (for example, by serving in the military of a foreign power) risk loss of U.S. citizenship.

      Because that's a real oath, with contractual meaning, it could be challenged on the constitutional requirement of "no religious test" grounds. (U.S. Const., article VI)

    3. Re:Parsing the Pledge... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, since we're re-living the 50's, no wonder we're growing a good thriving generation of 60's and 70's kids... =P

  373. Ridiculous moral equivalency is not an argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you really think the leader of a group that hijacks airliners to murder thousands and would certainly use weapons of mass destruction to murder millions more is the same as the democratically elected leader (yes, he got a higher percentage of any vote than Bill Clinton ever did...) of a sovereign nation that's defending itself so it doesn't get attacked again, you are one deluded dumb fuck.

    1. Re:Ridiculous moral equivalency is not an argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really think the leader of a group that hijacks airliners to murder thousands and would certainly use weapons of mass destruction to murder millions more is the same as the democratically elected leader (yes, he got a higher percentage of any vote than Bill Clinton ever did...)

      The process which got Bush elected was an utter parody of democracy. It really didn't matter who supposedly "won", the electorial process was a complete farce. Then we have Bush lecturing Cuba and Palestine about not being democratic enough. If this wasn't so serious it would be a complete joke.

      of a sovereign nation that's defending itself so it doesn't get attacked again,

      The US smashing Afganistan into the ground had nothing to do with a nation defending itself. Indeed many quite a few of the people who actually were defending their nation against attack got kidnapped to Cuba.
      If anything the "war on terror (except terrorists the US supports, of course)" serves as a nice distraction to asking why a very large number of people, paid by the US taxpayer, who were ment to be defending the US so utterly failed.
      If anything the actions of the US government since then have increased the risk of attacks against the US.
      If the US wants to be less of a terrorist target then a good starting point would be to stop interfering with other nations governments, cease "aid" to Israel, stop proping up dictatorships (typically those created by a US backed insurection).

  374. Re:What sort of lesson is Newdow's daughter learni by hyacinthus · · Score: 2

    "The lesson Newdow's daughter should get from the court decision is that there is still hope for religious freedom in this country, even though you often have to fight for it. The lesson is that patriotism isn't demonstrated by forced and phony public prayers. When you use the tools the founders gave us to preserve the rights they guaranteed us, that is defending your country. That is patriotism. That's what young Ms. Newdow knows about her dad now."

    No, I don't think you're right. Frankly, I don't believe for a second that young _Miss_ Newdow ("Ms."? It's not like we're uncertain of her marital status!) really cared one way or another about hearing the word "God" at school. When I was that age, I occasionally heard my school chums talking about God or church, and I don't remember feeling anything but mild curiosity, because I didn't go to church and my parents didn't have anything to say about God.

    No, I think her father got a weed up his ass, and calculated that a First Amendment lawsuit about "one nation under God" probably wasn't going to work..._unless_ he could pretend that his little daughter was somehow "hurt" by it, and thus gain sympathy points. Basically I think Mr. Newdow used his daughter as a tool to help his cause, and I think that's low.

    Now his daughter is probably going to be the most hated student at her school, and all her life she'll be dogged by the image that she was the little girl who wouldn't say the Pledge of Allegiance, even though the whole f**king mess was her father's idea and she was too young to understand how she was being used. She'll grow up to hate her father--I'll lay money on that.

    hyacinthus.

  375. Re:Good for the goose, good for the gander by tburkhol · · Score: 1
    I wish the entire idea of a forced Pledge of Allegiance would be done away with.

    The US forces all immigrant to pledge loyalty to the republic, and to disavow loyalty to any other state before being naturalized. Why is it so wrong to ask that people who just happened to be born here make the same pledge?

    It's not an oath to agree with every law Congress passes. It's not an oath to love the President. It's an oath to support the country and the principles upon which it was founded-freedom and justice.

  376. one nation under God?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can a country composed of Hindus, Christians, Scientologists, pagans, Jews, Wiccans, Buddhists, Moslems, atheists, Deists, agnostics, Taoists, the religiously indifferent, and just about anything you can think of be "one nation under God". I don't have children, but if I did, I wouldn't want them start every day at school by reciting a blatant, ridicuous lie.

  377. The Court is correct. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2

    Most of us, myself included, believe in a God or higher power so this decision is very irritating to us. However, our constitution does say that there must be a separation between church and State.

    Saying that a teacher lead pledge of allegiance, which mentions God, not to be promoting religion is a pretty hard position to defend.

    I believe that prayers and pledges should be allowed into schools on a voluntary condition. However to ensure that the school does not even have the appearance of sponsoring such activities, I think it wise that teachers not be allowed to join with students in these activities.

    For now, I think that we should realize the the original Pledge of Allegiance didn't have a reference to God so we should just use the original version.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    1. Re:The Court is correct. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many of us, myself included, do not believe in the higher power referenced in the Pledge of Allegiance.. and so reciting that section is quite odious to me. I do believe it is an establishment of religion, and you fucks should get that stragiht and not be offended.

    2. Re:The Court is correct. by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2

      'and you fucks should get that stragiht and not be offended.'

      Maybe you didn't read my post....

      I agree with the Court even though I do believe in a higher power.

      I don't feel offended as you obviously do.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  378. Re:Your Sig by You'reAFuckingMoron · · Score: 1

    "I ain't gonna have no more babies if the gobenment ain't gonna give me no more subsidy"
    &nbsp -- Some Moron


    Of course, we all know that moron went out and got preggers again anyhow. 'Cuz she was a stupid fucking moron.

    --
    What a fabulous troll your post was.... or how fabulously stupid you are. It's impossible to tell.
  379. What I don't understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

    One nation, under God, divisible by every single silly stupid belief that people want to hold. 9/11. World Trade Centers fall UNITING our country? The Pledge Of Allegiance is a joke! We Americans don't believe it so why does it matter? This case ONLY proves the total opposite that we are a nation of whiners and cry baby's and extremely over analytical to the point we are pretty useless...

  380. And it's about time, no ? by dargaud · · Score: 1
    When I first set foot in the US, I couldn't believe that on each banknote and coin was written "In god we trust"... In the supposedly most advanced country in the world !?! A lot of other countries chopped priests heads off two hundred years ago to get rid of this nonsense, and now, in full control there's still remnants of the darkest times of mankind. What's wrong with the US that they can't leave this behind ?

    But read what one of the best of all, Douglas Adams, had to say on the subject.

    --
    Non-Linux Penguins ?
  381. i elementary school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i remember having all kinds of jewish bullshit crammed down my throat, my parents didn't like it but never made a fuss, i for one is pissed of, stupid hippies

  382. Certain inalienable rights. by kyoko21 · · Score: 1

    It was kind of strange to first hear of this on the news, and not to much surprise this topic has generated much traffic and many, many posts from the fellow slashdot readers.

    For someone who was not born in the U.S., and was not raised of a 'religious' background, it is almost kind of sad to see that the courts would find that the pledge unconstitutional.

    I was not aware of the original intent by which 'under god' was inserted. However, from reading the posts that other individuals have written about it, it certainly does seem on face contradictory with the idea of separating church and state. And it may be correct to say that forcing someone to say those words with that intent is by all means unconstitutional.

    However, like all laws, I believe this should be left up for newer interpretations.

    The statement 'under god' though meant differently in those times, it certainly was meant to prescribe a different idea. However, I believe that perhaps the words 'under god' should not be interpreted so strictly. For a society that is becoming more and more demoralized where sex and violence is glorified, even our own U.S. presidents cannot seem to be decent role models when we learn on the six'o clock news about who is sleeping with who in the white house.

    It is not right to force someone to believe in God, Allah, Vishnu, or any other form of Diety, but in any religion, any 'morally' sounding belief, all religions teach that the basic fundamentals of being a decent individuals. Being 'under god' and not 'under God' perhaps is a better interpretation to remind everyone that life is short and though we are all mortals. Being under god certainly is an understatement considering that when we die, who knows what will really happen to us. But perhaps reciting the words 'under god' should remind us that regardless of what our relgious beliefs or backgrounds may be, we are one nation with liberty and justice for all that live in this land called the 'united' states of america.

    I say leave the words in the pledge and allow individuals to chose THEIR individual way to interpret just what 'under god' really means. By involving the courts to interpret what 'under god' means is by no means a separation of church and state. By involving the courts to make a ruling is in affect saying there is a god. Allowing individuals to interpret those words is a better decision.

  383. You're only making it worse for yourself!! by Thoth+Ptolemy · · Score: 1

    SINNAH!

  384. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You might have had a reasonable point, but the last paragraph completely blows anything reasonable you might have had to say.

    Given the current situation in the US in which people are held without trial,

    illegal residents held without trial

    the government talks openly of bypassing the courts with military tribunals

    Military tribunals for NON-CITIZENS who engage in terrorist activity (you'll note that the "American Taliban" is being tried in a court).

    the President is 'elected' on a minority of the vote

    No, the President was elected by a majority of the vote -- the electoral vote as specified in the US constitution (aka known as "The Law")

    after going to the supreme court to stop the votes being counted

    After going to the Supreme Court trying to get the government to FOLLOW THE LAW. Which it did. The law SPECIFICALLY said that there were time limits on counting the vote. People like you seem to just want the government to ignore the law when it suits you. Well, I've got news for you: the rule of law is critical to liberty, democracy and freedom. If you don't like the laws, get them changed, but don't whine when the government actually follows them.

    Given how ignorant you are of recent history, I can only assume that your "facts" about Nazi history are equally wrong.

  385. Deciding right/wrong without G/god(s) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Abiding the law

    Following the law = good

    breaking the law = bad

    (with exceptions)

    God didn't create our law, democracy did.

    Harmful consequences

    The 9/11 massacre was wrong because of (in no particular order):

    1. damage to the national economy

    2. loss of lives

    3. injuries

    4. property damage

    5. emotional blow to the family

    6. and for many more reasons.

    I did not have to refer to a creation myth character to know there were measurable and immesurable damages during 9/11.

    Empathy

    As intellectual beings, we are capable of understanding other's feelings, and the golden rule applies without being told.

    Upbringing

    Etiquette, manners, morals, &c can be taught to a child during childhood, with or without the guardian's usage of a creation myth.

    Personal preference

    Innate human emotions exist. Innate desires exist, such as eating, sleeping, sex, fighting, and caring. Individuals care for others with or without their reminder of your creation myth.

    No, muslims don't think 9/11 wasn't murder. If you were living on Earth this year, you would have been aware of a recent poll that indicated that the majority of muslims thought 9/11 was wrong. And I highly doubt that anyone thought 9/11 wasn't murder, although I'm sure that there are plenty of people like you who think there are many who don't consider 9/11 murder. Shame on you for stereotyping.

    By the way, did God ever order you to listen to his orders? If not, who? And ultimately who are you listening to, then?

  386. Re:The constitution does NOT state "no religion" by TheCeltic · · Score: 0

    The Constitution protects us from the Govt.trying to force any ONE religion on the people. It doesn't intend to force athiesm on the MAJORITY that are religious.

    The Majority of our founders were Christians (see the following LINK.

    The majority cannot (and should not) force religion on the minority, however.. the majority can define the rules of a society and if the minority is unhappy about those rules, they can choose to live elsewhere.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-= - The Celtic - =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
  387. The flag is nice and all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    but I won't say a pledge of allegience to it, period. Why? Because the oath I took was to defend the Constitution of the United States of America, not the flag, not the current government, not whatever social-political-economic structure holds sway at the time, none of it. It's the Constitution that IS the USA. I own and operate a very nice, large, US flag myself. I just don't worship it. I also agree with the court decision to excise the "under God" phrase.

    Now play this through your logic machine. The USA is unique in that it is based on a set of principles expressed inthe Declaration of Independence and subsequently codified in the Constitution. In fact, the USA IS the Constitution, and vice versa. Everything else is---or should be---subordinate to that main fact. Anything that isn't, then, is a threat to the Constitution. Any threat to the Constitution is by definition a threat to the USA.

    Got that? Good. Now go play most laws, regulations, and court decisions of the past and present century through that filter. No, I won't work it out for you---think!

    Ah, he begins to rant. Long road trip today, sleep-deprivation, and plain pissy bad temper.

    Non serviam,
    Thumper

    -----
    I'm too damn tired to sig or sign.

  388. Relax and let the clue stick slide in gently... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > shouldn't the Decleration (sic) of Independence
    > be next on the chopping block?

    The Declaration of Independence isn't part of the Constitution, nor is it a law. <sarcasm>IANAL</sarcasm>.

  389. Read the Declaration of Independence... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Declaration of Independence - for those of you non-patriotic folk (of whom there are obviously many), that's the document for whose signing we celebrate Independence Day. Learn a little history and read the document which helped lay the foundation for the America in which you have enough wealth and freedom to sit on your butt and gripe about how unfair it is to have such things.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

    The freedoms we enjoy in this nation - including not pledging allegiance to the nation where you live (go enjoy your freedom in Saudi Arabia if you don't like it here)are respected because they were granted by God, the same God you wish removed from the Pledge.

    Read a little history and learn to appreciate the sacrifices those before you made. Maybe the 4th of July will mean a little more than a day off work to get drunk.

  390. Re:What is scary is the quote by Sen. Charles Gras by n-baxley · · Score: 2

    He's not saying no one should do it, but rather that they will not get reelected if they do. He's probably right, and here is why. Elected officials are elected to act on the behalf of their constituents. If the majority of their constituents believe that this phrase should remain, and they see that their representative does not, they may well not vote for him as a representative of their views. Now if that representative comes from a largely athestic community, slashdot ville for example, then he/she/it has a good chance of getting relected. That's how a republic works.

  391. Wow! Parents be accountable? You're too radical! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    I agree with you that the government schools are outmoded and inefficient. They should be closed and the parents held accountable for the kids' education.

    However, schools are huge cash cows for local governments. They won't give them up easily.

    (On a side note, I find the parent to be very insightful and worth a good look from many. Whoever moderated this down as overrated from "+2, Insightful" needs to lay off the crack.)

  392. God in churches, not in Government. by zerofoo · · Score: 2

    "Amendment I

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof"

    The constitution framers wanted two things regarding religion and the state:

    1. They didn't want a government established religion like the Church of England.

    2. They didn't want any laws created that prohibited the free practice of the religion of your choice.

    Our Pledge of Alegiance roughly impacts the second point. If you are an atheist in a public school, you are forced to recite something contrary to your religious beliefs, effectively prohibiting you from practicing your religion.

    God belongs in churches, not in government.

    -ted

  393. God != Christian by n-baxley · · Score: 2

    Okay, to save time replying to each and every misinformed poster out there, let me clarify something for you all. When we talk about God, we are not talking about a specific religion. God is not unique to Christianity. To the Jews, God is Yawhe (sp?) to Islamics it's Allah, to Christians it's actually a tri-un god made up of three persons (God the Father, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit). The only people who have a problem with the concept of God is the athesits, or maybe the agnostics who are decidedly undecided on the whole matter. I have seen countless posts here that try to portray the "under God" phrase as Christian, or anti-Islamic, or non-Jewish. The prase says God, not Jesus or THE God. God is a very generic term. I don't mean to sound like flamebait, but just because all the slashdotters looking to rebel against something have seen christianity as one of those things to rebel against, doesn't mean the rest of the religious world sees it that way. Please become enlightened before you spew out your uneducated opinions.

    1. Re:God != Christian by ajmarks · · Score: 0

      As an orhtodox jew, i can safely say that no jew refers to G-d as "Yahwe" or any phonetic equivalent thereof. "Yahwe" comes from a transliteration of the word formed by the hebrew letters Yud-Hey-Vav-Hey, which together spell G-d's four letter name. This is a combination of the word for "past" (Hay-Yud-Hav), "present" (Hey-Vav-Hey"), and "future" (Yud-Hey-Yud-Hey), which arises from G-d's description of himself to moses at the burning bush. No Jew pronounces this phoneticly, but instead, pronounces it the same as another word for G-d, which means "my master."

      --
      Opinions are not Informative, though they may be Insightful or Interesting.
    2. Re:God != Christian by CyberLife · · Score: 1
      When we talk about God, we are not talking about a specific religion. God is not unique to Christianity.

      That argument is irrelevant. As has been pointed out many times before (even in the text of yesterday's decision) the problem isn't which god is referred to but the fact that ANY god is referred to. No matter how you look at it, the Pledge of Allegiance professes a belief in a deity. Which one is academic.

      The government is supposed to remain neutral in matters of religious faith. Several court decisions have upheld this notion. Since there are large numbers of people who believe there is no god of any kind, the only way to remain neutral on the subject is to make no mention of it. This in no way prevents anyone from believing or practicing what they wish. If someone needs state sponsorship of their faith to feel comfortable, it sounds to me like their beliefs wern't too stable to begin with.

    3. Re:God != Christian by n-baxley · · Score: 2

      You are right, that part is irrelevant. Yet it has been part of the argument in many slashdot posts on this story. That was my point.

  394. Pledge by Ky_Ranger · · Score: 1

    Here we go again. Yet another step to abolishing Christianity. Next "In God We Trust" will be taken off money. Just as every nation, and kingdom that has turned it's back on God, we too will be destroyed. It is truely a sad day in America. Should have seen it coming from courts where the judges and lawyers swear an oath and allegiance to the Queen of England.

  395. Ah finally by pcs305 · · Score: 1

    Comrade Stalin is smiling. Communism asserts categorically that God does not exist. Lenin stated that, "Atheism is a natural and inseparable portion of Marxism, of the theory and practice of Scientific Socialism." Once the existence of God is denied, all the moral laws that come from God are abolished. As the great Russian philosopher and author Dostoevsky said, "If there is no God, anything is permissible." Having rejected the divine moral code, the Communists proceeded to invent one of their own. Lenin defined it as, "Proletarian morality is determined by the exigencies of the class struggle." Applying this, any statement that assists the Communist revolution becomes true and any action that advances the Communist cause become righteous. Thus, the mass exterminations carried out by Stalin, Mao ze dong and Pol Pot were considered benign and righteous.

  396. This is a oath of loyality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Britian all subjects were required to give an oath of loyality to the crown. Being that the presidency is not a constiant and that the president can be very wrong the oath was to the true symble of the nation, the Union as reprensented by the flag. In case your wondering the military gives an oath of loyalty to the Constitution and not necessarly to the government that is operating under the guise of the Constitution. The flag repensents the Union the Union is the nation. The principles of the Constitution is what is defendended as the Constitution binds the nation the nation is also defended.

    I plege alleigance to the flag of the United States of America, one nation indivisable with liberty and justice for all.

  397. AND NO DEEP LINKING TO THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE! by vandelais · · Score: 2

    Our schools should do this to answer the courts

    Have our schools e-mail each student from their distribution list a link to the pledge of allegiance everyday.

    But make sure the originating email server is in China, just to be on the safe side.

    AND NO DEEP LINKING TO THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE!

    --
    Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
  398. Mod this up! by Elminst · · Score: 1

    Well said!

    --
    No unauthorized use. Trespassers will be shot. Survivors will be shot again.
  399. What the heck are you talking about!? And, why? by jasonn · · Score: 1

    Why Post Anonymously

    I have got absolutely no idea what this has to do with the thread you posted to. However, BSD is not dying. Why? Well, unlike a bunch of whining linux weenies, the goal of FreeBSD is to develop the best possible code. It matters not who uses it or for what purpose.

    This banter of anti-BSD is silly. So, I thought I might respond in kind. While you are measuring how many "web servers" are running BSD, perhaps you should consider how many routers, switches and appliances are running BSD . Of course, the fact that a crapload of Linux CDs are circulating out there, and widespread broadband allowing an unreal number of unprofitable web servers, the availability of Apache and IIS to practically anyone with a DSL, Cable or T1 connection to serve a web site and not to mention the number of server farms that rely solely on RedHat CDs to build their colo boxes does allow for a lot more of practically everything out there. BSD is not stupid friendly. That has become a serious focus of the Linux Development community (not all Linux weenies). So, it only makes sense that more web servers are running stupid friendly installations of anything. In that market, Windows and Linux have an advantage. But, I am not counting. I'd rather run something solid and stable than something popular. So, I will either toil over a clean build of Linux painstakingly removing anything silly or stupid put in place for the supid user community, or I will run a basically default build of a BSD distro.

    It's the Bell Curve of Operating Systems. There are simply more stupid admins than those willing to read a little now to save exploits and hassles later. Many Linux boxes, even Windows Servers are set up with the primary task being security and stability. However, most are default installs, as evident when you see how many Linux web servers run X11. As for me, to the death I will not give up my FreeBSD ports collection.

    --
    Build something beautiful!
  400. My small Victory. by Conrad_Bombora · · Score: 1

    you do know kids are not required to say it in school?....

    Once I learned I did not have to say the pledge in school I stopped. I was in the 8th grade and yes I was called down to the principles office, but the reality was is that I was right. And it was a great moment in my life for the first time I had a small rebellious victory I stuck it to "The MAN" Yeah!... later on that day I was beat up by a Nelson clone (Simpson's reference) and called a "commie fag" by him and the girl I had a crush on.

    So in hindsight they should let students know that it is an option and not a requirement, after all this is a democracy. Hell I bet the farm and the three-legged cow that kids don't even know what there saying when they say the pledge. Plus I wager all my WorldCom and Enron stocks that the teachers don't know anything about the origins or history of the pledge.

  401. Worried about harrasment?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If he brought this case to light because he was concerned about his daughter being harrased, that was a pretty stupid decision. She is going to be harrased now for the rest of her life because of it, probably even more than she would have been had she simply refused to say the Pledge.

  402. Do unto others.. by Thoth+Ptolemy · · Score: 1

    Do unto to others as you would them do unto you.

    Strangely enough something accredited to Christianity (is that the real source? or does the phrase or something like it predate the Christian 3 Commandments?) is readily picked up by atheist like me.

    Straight forward. Simple. Obvious. Non-religious. I'll take a good philosophy regardless of the source :)

  403. All Generalizations are False by egarrido16 · · Score: 1

    I've read well over 80 of the highest-rated posts on this board over the past thirty minutes and I have noticed one thing: almost each one of them that favors monotheism makes a generalization that all atheists are bad.

    Being an atheist myself, I am offended at such comments, but I certainly respect your right to say them (as per First Amendment to the United States Constitution). However, I feel that the generalization that all atheists will "jump down the throat of anyone who so much as whispers the G-word" is unfair to make. In my experience, I have found that the atheists I know accept all religions. As one of them, I believe everyone has the right to believe in what they want and that there should be no party that takes that right away from them. Conversely, I don't feel that anyone has the right to take away by beliefs either, especially using generalizations like those that have been used in these comments.

    I wish the outspoken monotheists (note: certain ones who speak out against atheists, not all monotheists and thereby avoiding a generalization) would not try to argue that atheists have wrong beliefs. Just because those are their beliefs do not make them right. Conversely, I feel that monotheists have as much right as I do to believe in what we feel we should believe in.

    Let's leave the religious hatred and animosity at the door. Collectively, we'll have such a better time here on Earth.

    --
    "Brevity is the soul of wit." -Polonius, Hamlet.
    1. Re:All Generalizations are False by metachimp · · Score: 1
      I'm right there with you, buddy. As an atheist who attended a Catholic high school, I find I know more about Christianity than many so-called christians, and can debate them (especially the fundamentalists) on their own ground.


      Athiests are: open minded, generally non-judgmental, friendly, ethical, responsible, red-blooded, taxpaying citizens who love their state and country, and want nothing but the best for themselves and others.


      Atheists are not: unhappy, morally ambiguous, narrow-minded, anti-American, mean, corrupt or actively trying to destroy the country.


      Hug an atheist today! (With the way things are going in this country, we need them...)

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  404. Thank Fordness! --and a "new" pledge by fooguy · · Score: 2



    I Pledge Allegiance
    to the Judges
    of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
    and to the Decision
    for which this stands
    One Nation
    in Agreement
    that the Separation
    of Church and State
    is ABSOLUTE.

    --
    "All I ever wanted was to see Larry Wall give Bill Gates a Perl necklace."
    http://www.eisenschmidt.org/jweisen
    1. Re:Thank Fordness! --and a "new" pledge by Tokerat · · Score: 1

      mod parent up, mod parent up , mod parent up

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
  405. Re:Simmer down QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "illegal residents held without trial"

    Absolutely NOT true. Padilla was born and raised in the good ol' USA, and while I have no more use for him than you do, he's still an American citizen being held without a charge or a lawyer. That's absolutely wrong and unconstitutional. That makes this:

    "Given how ignorant you are of recent history, I can only assume that your "facts" about Nazi history are equally wrong."

    Seem a little embarassing for you. Seing as you don't seem to have a grasp of what's going on in your own country, perhaps you should stop lecturing others, ya think?

  406. Huzzah! by MacMasta · · Score: 1

    Well, I've been saying this for years.
    When I finally realized how A) irrational religion is and B) that the pledge acknowledged it, I stopped reciting it.
    When they put it into High Schools (this year) I refused to even stand up, but for reasons of constitutionality, not personal ones.
    Note that "One nation, under flag" as the original pledge (pre-McCarthy/Eisenhower) reasds doesn't bother me in the slightest.
    This, however, is just the easiest step in the hard time that the US will have actually truly seperating church and state - the national motto, "In God We Trust" needs to go, which means re-minting all the money.
    Also, the prayer at the start of every congressional session needs to go, too.
    I am very glad that my little two-man (a friend did it with me) sit-down was well-reasoned. (according to the court) I hope it goes further.

    ~Mac~

  407. With citizens like these, who needs terrorists? by TrebleJunkie · · Score: 1


    I don't care what the court says. My Pledge of Allegiance will always contain the phrase "under God." I'll say it that way. I'll teach it my kids this way.

    Stupid atheiest fucks.

    --

    Ed R.Zahurak

    You know, oblivion keeps looking better every day.

  408. One nation, under Jehova . . . ? by richardmilhousnixon · · Score: 1

    "God" is inclusive of the religions you mentioned. It doesn't even have to refer to a diety. For instance, the TV is my God, and the remote died for my sins.

    If the pledge said, "One nation, under Jehova," that would only refer to Judeo-Christian beliefs.

    --
    -- sometimes AND gates turn me on.
  409. Kind of a creepy thing to make 5 year olds do by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When I was in junior high I actually thought about what I was reciting, and decided that I wasn't in a position to ally with the US. I might, or might not, but I was W-A-A-A-A-Y to young to make committments like that, and I knew it. Then it hit me that millions of 5 year olds have been reciting empty syllables, and that put me off even more. Look, a pledge has to be understood, or it's a farce. Few kindergarteners have the vocabulary to grok the Pledge. None are mature enough to make a promise like that in a meaningful way. And the mass indoctrination element of the practice, without discussion or explanation, is an ugly technique used for generally ugly purposes throughout history. The fact that it's the US, rather than the North Korean commies, or the Iraqi government, doesn't make it less creepy. We're doing the exact same thing those creepy governments do/did. Indoctrination.

    Now that I'm an adult, yeah, I'm ready to commit to supporting my country. I don't ally with the flag (a symbol is not the thing it represents), but I do with the Republic (what's left of it). I signed up for Selective Service, ready to go. I sing the national anthem at baseball games (from the audience). We've got a cool country. In many ways the best in history. In some respects, about average.

    I think what makes this place worth caring about is not just from the perspective of the accident that I was born here (when knuckleheads chant, "USA!USA!" it strikes me they would be singing "Deutschland Uber Alles" in another time and place). It's that people who weren't born here can be naturalized and belong, and participate fully in political life. (Apart from the statistically unlikely election to office of president/vp). Japan and Germany are admirable countries, but they don't offer a universally accessible vision. They offer the world a lot, but not a chance at citizenship.

    I'm aware that the INS is awful, and that the US is, and has been, hostile to immigrants. But those who do make it through the stupid hurdles can belong. Holland strikes me as about the most civilized country in the world, with a sensible and humane government, but I don't know anything about its immigration policies.

    I had to speak with the principal who decreed I just had to stay seated and quiet during the recitation. Seemed and seems reasonable.

  410. Here is the original Pledge of Allegiance by leek · · Score: 1
    The Bank of Wisdom is selling posters of the original Pledge of Allegiance, before it was corrupted with Christian rhetoric.

    Down with Christian theocrats!!!

  411. This wouldn't work with me... by vsavatar · · Score: 1

    If I were in a school affected by this declaration I would simply disobey it and would encourage other students around me to do so. What would they do? Expell all of us? Bind and gag us to keep us from saying it. I don't care what anyone says, the pledge is an oath of patriotism. Despite the words "Under God" it's primary purpose is one of patriotism. Besides there's no law which says you HAVE to say the words "under God" If you don't believe in God just simply skip that part. Just like the swearing in oath for the military. You can omit the part of "So help me God" or even the word "swear" if you so choose. Besides, no one can force you by law to say the pledge. Are they going to arrest you for not saying it? Will you get sued for not saying it? No, and I'm getting sick of people saying that every religious reference must be construed as encouraging the establishment of religion. This is simply our government trying to bludgeon Christians into submission and it won't work with me. I for one will gladly say the pledge of allegiance in public if the occassion so calls for it, and I will encourage my children to say it even if it's ruled against. The more I see this happening the more I think the end times are upon us.

    1. Re:This wouldn't work with me... by ironfroggy · · Score: 1

      1) I've never seen such a post-happy story on /. (at least not for a Looong time)
      2) My last year in public school, I refused to say the pledge. I was kicked out of the room for the rest of the year and had little choice but to wait in the office or wander the halls in the morning.

      I don't care why the ruling happened, I don't even know, but im glad it did. Alot of friends will be very glad to hear this.

    2. Re:This wouldn't work with me... by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      nobody is going to prohibit you from saying the pladge.

      What the court decision means that itwill beunconstitutional for the governmant to require anyoneto say it, display it in official places etc.

      You can say the pledge all you want. Nobody is trying to bludgeon you.

      Oh and while we are on the subject prohibition of school prayer does notmean you are not allowed to pray at school either. It means your school cant make you to.

      So there is no need for alarmist rants.

  412. In God We Trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  413. Re:While the ideals are good, They should not be by vcohen · · Score: 1
    (Pantheism pits the gods against each other. Monotheism pits men against each other. The latter is proving to be even more destructive than the former. Do away with both and you'll be happier. They ALL suck. Doesn't matter which. They start with a suspension of disbelief and slide down from there.)

    ooooh, that's one of the sweetest formulations I've come across in a long time! I hope you don't mind if I paraphrase you!

    and, yes, I remember The Politics of Dancing...

  414. Big Deal.... by VivianC · · Score: 2

    Don't get your undies in a bunch. This will most likely be overturned. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals is the most overturned court in the nation. The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on this years ago and came to the exact opposite conclusion. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Ohio's state Motto (With God, All Things Are Possible) does not violate the US Constitution. There is a ton of case law already established.

    By the way, In God We Trust was made official in the 1950's, but the motto was used on some money prior to 1860.

    --
    Viv

    Gmail invites for ip
  415. history of god on coins / attempt on constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rev. M. R. Watkinson wanted the preamble of the Constitution changed to:

    "We, the people of the United States, humbly acknowledging Almighty God as the source of all authority and power in civil government, the Lord Jesus Christ as the Ruler among the nations, His revealed will as the supreme law of the land, in order to constitute a Christian government..."

    http://quasisemi.com/ego/money.htm

  416. Hm... by addaon · · Score: 2

    I've always felt uncomfortable with the phrase "under God." It's not that I don't believe in God - I'm a firm monotheist - it's just that I feel that I'm at least as good as, if not better than, God. "With God" or "above God" would fit better, doncha think?

    On another note, any chance of this opening the road for us suing for damages? As someone who works in an industry where creativity and the ability to think is valued, I believe that all these people who have been brainwashed, with the now proven encouragement of the state, are a significant drag on our economy. Class action against the government? If bugs in code are worth $60G, Jesus has got to be work $600G.

    (Now we see the karma vanish, as those without a sense of humor get mod points.)

    --

    I've had this sig for three days.
    1. Re:Hm... by OracleX103 · · Score: 1

      I feel that I'm at least as good as, if not better than, God.

      Ego problem? They have medications for things like this. We could even break out the electrodes and zap you...

  417. So, should we throw out history too? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Know the acronym A.D. stuck on the end of dates? It stands for 'In the Year of our Lord' in latin. Looks like we can't teach history in public schools any more either.

    This is a case of several extream liberals have got it in their heads that any government related mention of anything religious constitutes an establishment of religion, a far cry from the original meaning of a 'state religion' (like the church of england at the time)

    The second problem is that the Constitution gives the Federal government no power or authority over education of any sort, take that away and the constitutional issues go bye-bye!

    1. Re:So, should we throw out history too? by Jouster · · Score: 1
      The Fourteenth Amendment allows federal power over state-run schools in many cases, including this one.

      Furthermore, no state may make a law which contradicts a federal law, or the Constitution. The arbiters who determine the meaning of the Constitution, and by extension, what state laws may and may not be made, are the federal courts.

      A.D. has about as much meaning outside its acronym as does S.C.U.B.A. If you believe an average third grader would be sufficiently motivated by the mention of "A.D." to look it up, translate it from Latin, and determine that "Lord" is a common appelation for the Judeo-Christian god, I suppose that would be valid. By comparison, I present the use of a capitalized, singular, masculine word referring, as inferred by several quotes surrounding its insertion into the Pledge, specifically to the Christian god, uttered each day, by law, by rote, by a person the child looks to for absolute truths, and which is being mindlessly yet forcefully chanted by everyone around the child.

      Let's keep some perspective here.

      Oh, and by the way:
      1. "A.D." simply means, "year of our lord". No "in".
      2. There should be a comma before "either" in the first paragraph.
      3. Learn how to spell "extreme".
      4. The words "government" and "related" should be hyphenated.
      5. As you aren't already inside double quotes at the time, you should use them around "state religion".
      6. "Church of England" should be capitalized.
      7. You need a period or other punctuation at the end of the second paragraph.
      8. And, finally, you posted on a controversial topic a comment that many people would agree with, yet did so anonymously. I can only conclude that these are not, in fact, your true views on the subject, or that some other trickery is afoot. While anonymity is a right many of us cherish, one must not foolishly assume it, or choose it in situations where your voice, backed by you as a person, is what is needed--not just another disembodied viewpoint.
      Jouster
    2. Re:So, should we throw out history too? by cronik · · Score: 1

      actually the new standard is CE (common era) and has been for the last 5 years or so.

      --
      Information wants to be free like speech wants to be free, not like we want beer to be free.
  418. God is Null by LPetrazickis · · Score: 1

    But if you don't believe in God, you consider God to be a null pointer and not nothing. That means that the phrase traslates to "In memory leak We Trust."

    --
    Is this a sigs-optional kind of place? 'Cause I am totally down with that if you know what I mean.
  419. adding drivel to contribute to 2k comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    worthless crap being posted here, i've just never seen 2k comments before

  420. "under God" not quite the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    A school is meant for teaching, and as such, should not completely dump the entire concept of religion. Children should be encouraged, not discouraged, from discussing their religious beliefs.


    I don't think that a student should be forced to pledge allegience to the flag or God at school, but they should be encouraged to talk about their life and beliefs. Many have taken on the dogma that separation of church and state should mean that government institutions should avoid any reference to God, God's, or the lack of a God.


    Since the US is not only the most religiously diverse nation, but the most religious of developed, western countries, religion should be spoken of often and openly because people consider their beliefs in everything they do. They make us who we are. Suppression of that is essentially forcing atheism on people, which is just as bad as forcing any other religion. No one is ever really converted to any belief by force.


    My two cents

  421. Not stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All that the politicians can say is that it is stupid etc. - they have nothing intelligent to say - because they know the ruling is really right. Many of them are afraid to admit it is right because they fear becoming unpopular. This just shows the extent of the religious corruption that exists in the government.

  422. Re:flag fetish is new too.... for the age of the U by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2

    Yes there was a need for a naval ensign, but the flag actually originated as a military banner. I'm not familiar with the historical or sociological data that could reliably tell us when the "flag fetish" began, but it seems reasonable to peg it to some time after large numbers of men were demobilized from the military and returned to civillian life. They would almost certainly have taken some of their military attitudes home with them, transferring the importance of the banner on the battlefield to a civillian context. Possibly after the Civil War, or one of the World Wars.

    --
    And the brethren went away edified.
  423. Emo Phillips on religious differences by Jake96 · · Score: 1

    I was walking across a bridge one day, and I saw a man standing on the edge, about to jump off. So I ran over and said, "Stop! Don't do it!"

    "Why shouldn't I?" he said.

    I said, "Well, there's so much to live for!"

    He said, "Like what?"

    I said, "Well, are you religious or atheist?"

    He said, "Religious."

    I said, "Me too! Are you Christian or Buddhist?"

    He said, "Christian."

    I said, "Me too! Are you Catholic or Protestant?"

    He said, "Protestant."

    I said, "Me too! Are you Episcopalian or Baptist?"

    He said, "Baptist!"

    I said, "Wow! Me too! Are you Baptist Church of God or Baptist Church of the Lord?"

    He said, "Baptist Church of God!"

    I said, "Me too! Are you Original Baptist Church of God or are you Reformed Baptist Church of God?"

    He said, "Reformed Baptist Church of God!"

    I said, "Me too! Are you Reformed Baptist Church of God, Reformation of 1879, or Reformed Baptist Church of God, Reformation of 1915?"

    He said, "Reformed Baptist Church of God, Reformation of 1915!"

    I said, "Die, heretic scum!" and pushed him off.

    -- Emo Phillips

  424. The Logic of Morality by borgillel · · Score: 1

    While I agree with the concept that morality can be logical, I disagree that morality is simply a "set of rules" allowing the "maximum level of happiness" among people. I'm afraid that the logical portion would break as soon as the fancies of the majority changed. It sounds to me like you are describing a form of relative moralism, which has less to do with logic and more to do with style. At least with true logic, you have the assurance of repeatability. Try showing me a form of morality that doesn't change, and you'll likely have shown me one based on true logic.

    By the way, you gave an nice seed example of relative moralism in your assertion that murder should be wrong. However, you didn't really logically show why murder was wrong, only that you think it is wrong because you, and perhaps others (the majority), don't like it. You suggest that murder should be illegal, because making it so serves the "well-being of the population." But, perhaps the killing of a certain sect of unpopular or troublesome people would favorably serve the majority of the rest of the population in their quest for happiness. How would you then satisfy the need of the majority without giving them the very thing that would make them happy, i.e. killing that sect? But that argument will surface that killing is different than murder. In what way? and who determines the extent of a morally just reason for taking life?

    As always, questions about morality lie much deeper in religion and philosophy than I believe many would care to think.

  425. Lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pretty funny, Americans are so stupid hehe.

  426. Odd by fluxrad · · Score: 2

    everyone seems to be forgetting the good old e pluribus unum that we used to have on bills.

    Besides, it's about damned time for the gub'ment to get some Wal-Mart style roll back action on!

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
    1. Re:Odd by akhaksho · · Score: 1

      E Pluribus Unum means "One from Many" or "Out of Many, One" in Latin. There's nothing religious about it. It is a part of the Great Seal of the USA and is unrelated to currency, though it is on the back of the $1 bill.
      Check out www.greatseal.com for more info.

  427. Just read the text of the decision... by dactex · · Score: 1

    It is clear (at least to me) that the decision goes to the heart of what a "Pledge of Allegiance" is and to what it means to be an American citizen. To swear loyalty to one's country should not have a religious-belief test embedded, at least not in a country that purports to embrace religious liberty. This is irrespective of the fact that most people are never required to recite the Pledge. If the First Amendment means anything at all, it is that all Americans are free to believe as they choose. It seems to me that Congress today, in their defiant-pledge-recital-on-the-Capitol-steps photo-op don't seem to get it. It has absolutely nothing to do with pushing god out of, or into, the public square. It has everything to do with whether government has the right to attempt to push god into the heart and/or mind of a citizen.

  428. ...with liberty and justice for all. by ScottForbes · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Most people in this country [sic] are monotheistic, and since majority rules we have "In God we Trust".

    Most people in the USA are Christians, too, and since majority rules, we're outlawing Judaism and Islam next week!

    Or not. The U.S. Bill of Rights acknowledges certain rights of the individual that cannot be taken away by any government under any circumstances -- further, the Declaration of Independence proclaims that when a government denies these rights, the people have the right to overthrow it. From the Declaration:

    [...] We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. [...]

    In other words, I don't care how many people vote that you'll become a Methodist, or be forbidden to own firearms, or that the book you wrote should be banned. The will of the majority is not sufficient to deprive you of these rights. In fact you are inseparable from these rights: You cannot be deprived of them, period.

    If you want to live in a country where the government thinks it can deprive you of your unalienable rights, go to China. (Of course, this is a separate issue from the question of whether an atheist has an unalienable right not to hear other people recite the words "under God" in a public space; I can buy the argument that says no one should be required to endorse a religion, but I think we're off the deep end here.)

  429. Why bother? by ubernostrum · · Score: 1

    If they don't like America, they can stay here and we'll lock them up, no trouble. Just wait until the Enemy Combatant Prize Patrol rolls up to your door at 4 AM to tell you the Office of Homeland Defense is going to imprison you without charges, evidence, a trial, or even a lawyer. That'll teach all the damned ingrates to respect a free country.

  430. I am truly saddened. by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    This is the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and it was FOUNDED ONE NATION UNDER GOD.

    Why do we have to give up our country and what it started as to all the crazies in our country, half of which aren't even native born.

    I know that everything now is all about being politically correct and pro-choice, pro-homosexual, pro-minority this and that...

    How much longer before the "normal" people are the ones that are the minority and have been stripped of all their rights?

    Go ahead and mod me down. I know that most of the people on here are liberal with every belief, but man, I sure do like the way things were going before all this crap.

    It really hurts to have all the things that I truly believe in stripped away from me just to make other people happy that probably shouldn't be here anyway.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
    1. Re:I am truly saddened. by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      so the fact that other children arent forced to recite a couple of sentences strips something away from you?

    2. Re:I am truly saddened. by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      "Under God" was added in 1954.. How is that what it started as?

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  431. Missed the point by the_truk_stop · · Score: 1

    > To too many people, God is the only definition of morality,
    > which precludes any morality being "above God"

    No, why is it that you need to be more moral than God? You seem to be having the same problem Adam and Eve had: to be like God (well...you're trying to be above Him, but close enough). You see, the God of the Bible by definition IS good; from Him eminates all morality. His 10 commandments seem pretty consistent with what I would assume you consider 'good': don't murder, don't adulterate, etc. Why would you need anything more moral than God? If there's something more moral than God, God can no longer be God.

    As for having some form of morals higher than those that God has already set, who will they come from? If they come from a Christian, you get hacked off and whine about how your "rights" are infringed upon when he legalizes the Pledge of Allegiance in its current form. If it's some random whacko, I'll get hacked off and whine when he legalizes drunk driving. Are you going to sue me because you have some viewpoint about how many times I can use the word "the" in a sentence, that got violated somewhere in this epistle?

    > no morality can stand in the way of the murder or genocide

    That is a good point, however you're coming from the position that God is not inherently just. I can't really say much more about that, though; it's like trying to describe colors to a blind man.

    -- Truk

    1. Re:Missed the point by ToastyKen · · Score: 2
      His 10 commandments seem pretty consistent with what I would assume you consider 'good'

      You conveniently ignored the many God-sanctioned/encouraged massacres and genocides in the Old Testament that were mentioned in the post that you replied to. They pretty much go completely against his "thou shalt not kill" bit.

      You do eventually argue that these actions are justified because God is inherently just. The problem is: How do we know what is and is not sanctioned by God? How do you know that Osama wasn't instructed by God to do what he does just as people were instructed to rape and pillage whole cities by God in the Bible?

      The de facto answer, of course, is "He is worshipping a false God and/or is delusional." But I bet he would say the same about you. Who's to say that he's wrong? Because he supports mass murder and is thus not credible? You just openly acknowledged your support for the massacre of whole cities because the Bible says that they were sanctioned by God....

      In fact, anyone with different religious beliefs would hold a different set of morals from you. And that's the fundamental problem: People have different views about what's moral.

      In order to function as a society, we hold many mostly shared morals, often compromising to live together. If a few people claim they are doing something in the name of God, and others don't agree, the others won't let them do it. Are these people claiming that are "above God"? No. They are claiming that they are above the people who are claiming to act in the name of God.

      It's convenient to say that religion is the highest morality until you realize that many others will claim the same thing, but with different religions. The alleged word of God is being delivered through fallable mortals, so we have to treat the messages as fallable as well.

    2. Re:Missed the point by CProgrammer98 · · Score: 2

      Where in the Bible does God sanction raping?

      Please let me know...

      --
      And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another, and every one by his neighbour Isaiah 3:5
    3. Re:Missed the point by macrohard0 · · Score: 0
      His 10 commandments seem pretty consistent with what I would assume you consider 'good': don't murder, don't adulterate, etc.

      I don't see anything good about the first four.
    4. Re:Missed the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Where in the Bible does God sanction raping? Please let me know...

      I think the closest you will find is the following order from Moses in Numbers 31:17-18, after the defeat of the Midianites:

      Now therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known man by lying with him.

      But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves.

    5. Re:Missed the point by the_truk_stop · · Score: 1

      > instructed to rape and pillage whole cities

      CAUTION: very off-topic. To clarify: God never once told anyone to rape anybody...as for pillaging, I seem to recall Him saying "Go kill everyone, but take nothing". The point was to punish the people for their sins.

      > the others won't let them do it

      Right. But if I understand all you people correctly, that would constitute a massive disregard for the psycho's 'rights' and 'freedom'. And that person running around claiming God told him to kill everyone is trampling on YOUR 'freedom'. So who's 'freedoms' are being more trampled on?

      I'm noticing a disturbing assumption on many people's parts that any given person's private beliefs CAN be separated from their public beliefs. As a born-again Christian, I don't see how I can EVER separate my public life from my private life: my God desires/demands that my public life reflect my personal beliefs. I'm not going to run around killing people, but if I pray in a restaurant, who's business is it?

    6. Re:Missed the point by Darmox · · Score: 1
      Where in the Bible does God sanction raping? Please let me know...
      Genesis, fairly early--Lot, who is held to be a good man, offers his two virgin daughters to the men who(as I understand it) have invaded his home. Lot is held to be a pretty righteous man, and is the only one saved from Sodom(IIRC, I may be a bit off here)
      --
      If I was that drunk, I would have remembered it -- H. Simpson
    7. Re:Missed the point by CProgrammer98 · · Score: 1

      LOT offered his daughters, nothing was said about him being commanded by God to do so...

      1 AND there came atwo bangels to Sodom at even; and Lot sat in the gate of Sodom: and Lot seeing them rose up to meet them; and he bowed himself with his face toward the ground;

      2 And he said, Behold now, my lords, turn in, I pray you, into your servant's house, and tarry all night, and awash your feet, and ye shall rise up early, and go on your ways. And they said, Nay; but we will abide in the street all night.

      3 And he pressed upon them greatly; and they turned in unto him, and entered into his house; and he made them a afeast, and did bake bunleavened bread, and they did eat.

      4 But before they lay down, the men of the city, even the men of Sodom, compassed the house round, both old and young, all the people from every quarter:

      5 And they called unto Lot, and said unto him, Where are the men which came in to thee this night? bring them out unto us, that we may aknow them.

      6 And Lot went out at the door unto them, and shut the door after him,

      7 And said, I pray you, brethren, do not so wickedly.

      8 aBehold now, I have two bdaughters which have not known man; let me, I pray you, bring them out unto you, and do ye to them as is good in your eyes: only unto these men do nothing; for therefore ccame they under the shadow of my roof.

      --
      And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another, and every one by his neighbour Isaiah 3:5
    8. Re:Missed the point by CProgrammer98 · · Score: 1

      I pasted that verbatum from a site that has superscript letters indicating footnots, I appologize for the a's and b's in front of some of the words.

      --
      And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another, and every one by his neighbour Isaiah 3:5
    9. Re:Missed the point by ToastyKen · · Score: 2
      God never once told anyone to rape anybody

      This comment has spared me from bothering to look up an instance of God ordering rape, since it points out Numbers 31:17-19. Rape is implied in ownership of women. (In fact, in many countries in the world today, "marital rape" is taken for granted as an okay thing.) Which reminds me: I forgot to mention God's sanctioning of slavery in the Bible as well.

      But if I understand all you people correctly, that would constitute a massive disregard for the psycho's 'rights' and 'freedom'. And that person running around claiming God told him to kill everyone is trampling on YOUR 'freedom'. So who's 'freedoms' are being more trampled on?
      Firstly, I'm one person, not "people". I speak for myself. Secondly, you're making a strawman attack. I've never said that I'm for total freedom of everyone. That's called anarchy, and I"m not for it by any means. I'm for social constructs. I'm for legal systems based on negotiation and compromise.

      Yes, we do have to give a little "freedom" to live together. I give up the freedom not to go around stealing people's stuff and killing people for the security of knowing that my own stuff won't be stolen, and that people won't be killing me. Just where the line between freedom and security ought to be drawn is a matter of constant debate, of course. I for one have never said that I don't want any security.

      As a born-again Christian, I don't see how I can EVER separate my public life from my private life: my God desires/demands that my public life reflect my personal beliefs. I'm not going to run around killing people, but if I pray in a restaurant, who's business is it?

      Again, I think you're attacking a strawman. I for one have not the slightest issue with your praying in a restaurant. I don't think there's any law against that, either. I have no problem with your religious beliefs influencing your public life, either. I don't even have a problem, per se, with people's religious beliefs affecting matters of public policy. (I am not theoretically opposed to people opposing contraception education for religious reasons, for instance, however much I may disagree.) What I am against is gov't policy specifically endorsing a religious belief.

      So again, you have the freedom to act in accordance with your religious beliefs, but I have the right to act in accordance with mine. And, in reality, we will compromise, even if we're not fully satisfied. That's how real life works.

    10. Re:Missed the point by Darmox · · Score: 1
      You're right on that, I suppose, but I would think it is a matter of interpretation...
      Behold now, I have two bdaughters which have not known man; let me, I pray you, bring them out unto you, and do ye to them as is good in your eyes: only unto these men do nothing; for therefore came they under the shadow of my roof.
      I'd say that it's pretty clear what he's offering, and although not commanded by God, he is held to be a good and righteous man. I guess that a big thing comes in, too, between what is good in the Old Testament, and the New...
      --
      If I was that drunk, I would have remembered it -- H. Simpson
  432. Since the Pledge of Allegiance was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rulled Unconstitutional, then They need to remove ALL Harry Potter Books from school Libraries because it endorses the Wiccan/Pagan Religion.

  433. I realize i'm taking a very unpopular stance here by intermodal · · Score: 1

    but the constitution was formed by christians for christians. Those who colonized the American east were one of two things: deported criminals, or christians who wanted to worship in their fashions without a state controlled religion (i.e. roman catholic, anglican) telling them what they had to do to be good christian people. Enter the constitution, created by a group of largely if not solely christian men upon christian beliefs, intending to insure that their right to worship in their own beliefs rather than what they were told to.

    "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."

    this is what the bill of rights says concerning religion, that congress shall make no law RESPECTING (in the language of the day: concerning, not the modern "to have respect for") an establishment of religion. So yes, this makes it illegal for the government force people to believe one thing or another, or to do something for someone else's religious beliefs rather than your own. However, this does not show reason to ignore or attack religion or holy acknowledgement of God (mind you, the term "god" can be applied to any god, not just the christian god in which I believe. Even the muslim term Allah is just their word for God, IIRC). While Congress may not make a law concerning an establishment of religion, the constitution flagrantly acknowledges, like it or not, that the United States as a country is to acknowledge that there is a greater omnipotent power in some way shape or form. Like it or not, Atheism is not protected by the second amendment, but is also not prohibited by it either. While you're not required to adhere to a religious standard beyond which law dictates (i.e. coincidencees such as murder being illegal by law coinciding with murder being prohibited by many religions), you're not protected from the fact that the government is not in fact an atheist, but is in fact formed in the likeness of a giant, multi-person Christian who has over time become mostly an agnostic in denial.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  434. The Court Was Right, and Didn't Go Far Enough by markwelch · · Score: 5, Insightful
    On another list, someone wrote:
    > In its ruling, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a 1954 act of Congress that inserted the phrase "under God" after the phrase "one nation" in the pledge. <

    It is disappointing that so many of the TV news accounts this evening ignore the 1954 amendment, and falsely state that the pledge has contained the "Under God" wording for more than a century.

    I have always been uncomfortable -- at least since the seventh grade -- saying those two words. More recently, as someone educated in the law (yes, I am a lawyer) and as someone who has taken an oath to defend the Constitution of the United States, I do not believe that our Constitution places our country "under God" but expressly separates church and state. There were earlier cases prohibiting schools from compelling students to recite the pledge or salute the flag if it conflicted with their religious beliefs (for example, some religious groups refuse to salute the flag because they view the flag as a "graven image" (false idol) prohibited by the Second Commandment).

    This case, like the school prayer cases, revolved around the implied endorsement, pressure, and stigma involved when the pledge and its "under God" language are recited in public classrooms.

    To be honest, I've never understood why anyone thinks it is appropriate to demand that school children (many of them non-citizens), pledge allegiance to the "flag," as this helps reinforce the belief that if someone is waving the flag, we must blindly follow them, and criticizing the flag-waver is somehow "un-American." Even in this "revolutionary" ruling, the court did not prohibit schools from having a flag-salute ceremony that includes reciting a "pledge of allegiance to the flag" without the "under God" language.

    Unfortunately, there is little doubt among legal scholars, or in my mind, that an "en banc" panel of the 9th Circuit will reverse this ruling, or if they do not, then the U.S. Supreme Court will gladly reverse it. As my former Constitutional Law professor (Boalt Hall's Jesse Choper) said in several TV interviews today, the Supreme Court will certainly view this language as "too small" to be worth ruling invalid -- oddly enough, arguably consistent with the Court's repeated hints that in order for Congress to prohibit flag-burning, it must first decide if the flag will be the "one thing" that they will prohibit desecrating (and Congressmen have too many sacred cows that they won't sacrifice to that trivial issue).

    The most disappointing thing about the "person on the street" interviews I saw on the news today, is that the questions posed by the newspersons were about "making it illegal for children to recite the pledge of allegiance," which is not what the ruling said. Why can't people understand the difference between censoring people who want to recite the pledge without state compulsion (free speech) and the state compelling someone to say something that they do not believe, in direct contradiction to the "establishment" and "free exercise" clauses of the first amendment -- or regulating people's beliefs or speech (which is what Congress was really trying to do in 1954, to oppose the "Godless communists" and reinforce the widespread belief that you must believe in "the One God" to be a "real" American)?

    Note that I have no objection that members of my local Rotary Club recite the pledge (including the "under God" language) and one of our members is asked to say a prayer each week -- I can respect the decision of the majority of a private club's members on these points, though that when we recited the pledge during a visit by two dozen guests from our Mexican "sister city," some of our guests were visibly uncomfortable. (For a year or more, our Rotary Club had a humorous running debate about how long the pause should be before "under God.") Some weeks, the prayer is expressly Christian, once it was explicitly Muslim, most weeks it is quite generic, and occasionally, it is a non-religious statement or "thought.")

    On another list, someone wrote:
    > The founders of this country -- or whoever -- were quite right not to include that phrase in the "Pledge of Allegiance" originally. <

    The reference to "the founders" jarred me, because I had thought the Pledge of Allegiance was created after the civil war (hence the "indivisible" language).

    Apparently, we were both wrong: according to "A Short History of the Pledge of Allegiance" ( http://www.vineyard.net/vineyard/history/pledge.ht m ), the pledge was written (apparently by a Socialist, no less) in 1892. Of course, that's just what someone said on a web page. See also http://www.google.com/search?q=+history+%22pledge+ of+allegiance%22+under+God+indivisible

    --
    -- http://www.MarkWelch.com/ Pleasanton California
    1. Re:The Court Was Right, and Didn't Go Far Enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fascinating. A bit OT but the slogan WWJD was also conceived by a socialist.

  435. attention bad moderation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fascism isnt funny.

    I know the poster wasprobably joking but there will be plenty of people suggesting this for real in the media soon, and thats not funny at all.

    1. Re:attention bad moderation by guttentag · · Score: 2
      Fascism isnt funny.
      I disagree.

      Many people become so attached to their prejudices and positions that they filter out all alternative points of view. Sometimes this is a conscious defense, but it often becomes autonomic. In such cases, the only way to slip an idea past the zombie defense is through a trojan horse called humor. Humor is a convenient vehicle for ideas because it's contagious -- if an idea has a tasty coating a person will share the gem with his friends before he finds the dark humor center.

      A gravely-serious subject is often more deserving of humor than a whimsical one.

      On this particular subject, people are so conditioned to defend the pledge they ridicule the ruling for "declaring the Declaration of Independence unconstitutional." As a number of people on Slashdot have pointed out, the Declaration has nothing to do with the Constitution. But the people who need to hear that are not listening, and they include members of Congress and the president -- people who should know better because they are charged with writing and enforcing the laws that keep the Constitution relevant.

      If we've reached the point where Slashdot posters need to explain the Constitution itself to the elected politicians in Washington, I think inappropriate humor is justified in attempting to jump-start the critical thought processes in the minds of readers.

  436. If you don't believe it .. by BMaximus · · Score: 0

    don't say it. No one is forcing these people to say "under God". No one would jump on them for omitting two words. Its a free country, isn't it? How is it hurting them that those words are there? I wonder how many individuals refuse to say the Pledge of Allegiance at all? Do we jump on them when they don't? No,its their right not to. We need to take a closer look at these individuals and why they are here when they do that but we don't force them to say something that they don't believe in. This is political correctness gone over the top. This is one example where being PC is hurting America. I for one will keep on saying the Pledge as I have always known it.

  437. Danger! Crushing Irony Ahead! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The following is an excerpt from a UPI story, by Hil Anderson:

    -----Begin Excerpt-----

    The original Pledge of Allegiance was written in 1892 by Francis Bellamy, who was both a Baptists minister and the chairman of a committee of state school superintendents established to come up with a program to mark the quadricentennial celebration for Columbus Day in 1892.

    According to John Baer's 1992 book, "The Pledge of Allegiance, A Centennial History, 1892-1992," the Pledge was written as an accompaniment to a schoolyard flag-raising ceremony.

    The original pledge read: "I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all."

    Baer said the phrase "flag of the United States of America," was added over Bellamy's objections by the 1923-1924 National Flag Conference.

    President Eisenhower signed off on the "under God" clause in 1954 after Congress passed the proposal that was backed by the Knights of Columbus."

    -----End Excerpt-----

    Not only was the pledge created by a Christian, but the pledge has been stupidly tweaked TWICE since it was created.

    Personally, I'll recite the original from now on.

    Mike Nomad

  438. No Wonder.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why there are so many Problems in our Schools, God is not allowed in. The Atheists of this nation want ALL THINGS pertainiong to God Removed from Schools"But yet want everyone Taught that we supposedly evolved from Apes". God will not Enter a place where He is not Invited, And if God is not present, then Satan will invite himself. And people wonder why God allowed the Tragedy at Columbine to occur.

    P.S. I will pray for all you atheists out there. :)

  439. you are partially right by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

    the second ammendment does not protect atheists it protects gun enthusiasts.

    BUT the first ammendment does proterct atheists.

    Oh and forcing kids to say "under God" is an establishment of religion. It doesnt matter that that religion is of unclear origin.

    btw i am not an atheist, i am christian, but i dont see why God must be forced on anyone.

    1. Re:you are partially right by intermodal · · Score: 1

      i'm not saying it should be forced on anyone. hell, i don't even think we should have a "pledge of allegiance". the basics of that are just part of being an american. Forcing patriotism is the part that violates the first amendment, not just the pledge itself. And i apologise for my misnumbering...i know very well it's the first amenment. i just am sleep deprived and distracted by allergies at the moment. The gist of what i was trying to get across is that atheism is niether prohibited nor supported, and as such, denying god is just as bad as acknowledging a greater power from a first amendment standpoint. The pledge at this point (due to nearly fifty years of existence post modification) cannot be one way or the other without pissing people off. I say the government should cast it off and leave it to the Boy Scouts, and just declare that the whole thing isn't an important enough issue to bother with, rather than setting bad precedents which will inevitably be used in court to strike out at actual religious things (oooh, that christian church's cross being there offends me! i shouldn't have to see that walking past their building, or some other such crap). I guess i wasn't very clear the first time.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  440. the word "god" predates monotheism by texchanchan · · Score: 2

    Re, ...at some point english speakers used it to represent any God. This is not its origin however as it wasn't meant to be generic term...

    Sure it was. Monotheism only arrived in what would become the English-speaking world about 1500 years ago. The word "god" definitely predates the advent of the Christian religion into the consciousness of the Britons. You can tell this by observing that it has a cognate in German, Gott, which means that the word goes back at least as far as the time before the future English speakers and the future German speakers parted company.

    Note also that God, when used as the name (not category) of a deity, is capitalized because it is a proper noun. Failing to capitalize a proper noun to show you don't believe that the referent exists is a misuse of typography; if god (as a proper noun referring to the Jewish-Christian-Muslim deity), then also jupiter, venus, thor, weyland smith, etc., which are clearly incorrect.

  441. Isn't the original intent discriminatory? by Andonyx · · Score: 2

    There's a couple things several people seem to be missing in their arguments against this ruling.

    1. This addition to the pledge, simply the words, "Under God, " was added by Eisenhower after a private petition, in 1954. This was at the height of the cold war, and the anti-communist paranoia known as the red scare.

    Now while you may or may not argue the real-life practical implications of having two words in or out of the pledge of allegiance it can well be argued that this addition to the pledge was designed deliberately to make a distinction between American Citizens and Communists. (Communists with a capital 'C' being specifically the Marxist type who rejected the notion of religion as fallacy designed to manipulate the masses.)

    If that's the case, the recitation of the pledge of allegiance not only rejects the right to support that form of communism but essentially denies the same class of citizenship to those who would not choose to believe in a singular deity, or a deity at all.

    2. This "Minor" addition was done at the behest of small vocal minority represented by the Knights of Columbus. So in this case, a small group was able to impose a demonstrative gesture of patriotism, that up until recently was in fact mandatory in many school systems.

    This somewhat weakens the argument of many of the legislators that this ruling is somehow out of step with mainstream thinking in America. While it may certainly not represent majority thinking, niether did its inclusion in the first place.

    3. Finally, when this became a statute, Eisenhower is quoted as saying, "From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural schoolhouse, the dedication of our Nation and our people to the Almighty."
    So it seems that the original intent of this clause was indeed to indoctrinate the idea into our children that this was a monotheistic nation, and that somehow, the success or failure of this nation is either due to, or accountable to a supreme being.

    That's not a notion I want my kids to be taught in school.

    Finally, My own two subjective cents:

    If the school administration, the parents, and the politicians are constantly lamenting the state of U.S. Public education compared to other wealthy technologically advanced nations; what if we spent that time time we are wasting on the pledge of allegiance to teach our the class one useful fact about our nations history, how to be more informed in civil or political matters, or how they could find avenues to participate in that government.

    I would rather spend 2 minutes helping the children become better more informed citizens to instill a real and honest sense of patriotism in them, than to spend that time asking them to memorize rote empty declarations of allegiance to an abstract and unfamiliar governing body.

    ---
    Andonyx
    www.andonyx.com

    --
    Andonyx www.andonyx.com
  442. Re:I realize i'm taking a very unpopular stance he by metachimp · · Score: 1
    Actually, the constitution was written by deists for people of any faith at all.


    Religion of any kind and civil government have must be kept seperate, because they just don't seek to accomplish the same tasks. Religion is for your spiritual well-being, and figuring out what happens after you die. Governments are for much more material things.


    I think it debases the nature of our religions to force them into the worldly sphere of governments and law. Shouldn't Christianity be able to stand on its own merits? Why do so many feel that it must be integrated with base, human government?

    --
    The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  443. not mentioning god is not denying god by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

    Just because God is not mentioned it does not mean that the pledge asserts that god does not exist.

    It would be an interesting constitutional question whether a pledge that says "and God does not exist" would violate the establishment clause (it will probably violate the free excercise clause) but thats not whats happening here, and it wont be happening any time soon.

    I know people will be pissed off, but the constitution does not say the government shall not piss people off.

    1. Re:not mentioning god is not denying god by intermodal · · Score: 1

      Just because God is not mentioned it does not mean that the pledge asserts that god does not exist. actually, removing the clause actively does imply this. ever hear of lying by omission? If the phrase had never been in there it'd be one thing, but removing it just plain feels blasphemous.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  444. i am sick of this bullshit by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

    tell me who where when is persecuting the religous?

    If you think that not being forced by the government to do something is persecution, then you believe that government coersion is freedom, and thats pretty fuscking strange.

    O and by the way some realigions have God(s) and some religions do not allow you to say God, and some people dont have a religion.

  445. PC Pledge by Phleg · · Score: 1

    I pledge allegiance to the flag of my country, any other country, or simply to no flag at all and to the form of government the people of its sovereign nation have chosen for which it may or may not stand. One nation, several nations as part of an economic, political, or social union, no nation, or a nation composed of previously separate nations, under my deity, deities of choice, no deity at all, or a ruler appointed by divine right, indivisible (or divisible, as it may be), with liberty and justice, liberty and injustice, servitude and justice, or servitude and injustice for all, a portion of the population, or noone at all.

    --
    No comment.
  446. Where did you go to k-12 school? Berkeley? by ibi · · Score: 1

    In the real world kids get the crap beat out of them all the time for being different. (Girls, of course, are socially isolated instead - which tends to be more damaging in the long run ...)

    Walk a mile in their Keds before you go diss'ing the chips on the shoulders of some of those atheists - you might find they earned them. In *most* of the US being anything but Christian isn't acceptable at all.

    Just look at how all the Senators and congress critters are falling over themselves to denounce this decision.

  447. Re:I realize i'm taking a very unpopular stance he by LinuxGeek · · Score: 2
    Actually, the constitution was written by deists for people of any faith at all.

    Actually, you can read select quotes of our founding fathers here.

    I will give you a head start with a few quotes:
    "He who should introduce into public affairs the principles of Christianity will change the face of the world." ~ Ben Franklin


    "The Christian Religion, in its purity, is the basis and the source of all genuine freedom in government." ~James Madison
    --

    Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
  448. Establishing a religion... by Whatever+Fits · · Score: 1

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof...

    Thomas Jefferson's famous quote about separation of church and state has been quite misused, so much so that most Americans believe that those words are actually in the constitution. The quote was in response to a church association asking then President Jefferson for support and assurance regarding their religious persecution that they were suffering. This was because the Danbury Baptist Association were Baptists in a Congretationalist state. They were constantly persecuted for that. They were obviously concerned about that and Jefferson reassured them that the federal government could not write any laws to govern their church.

    "Establishing a religion" was in response to the Church of England and all the different political churches that these same people had fled from before the foundation of America. This is not to say that we can't pray in school or say the pledge. This means that we can not say that the U.S.A. is now an atheistic country by law, just like we can't say that every man is to be a Baptist or a Congregationalist. That would be the establishment of a religion. The religion of atheism.

    --
    My name fits again.
  449. The land of the Free? by AnarchieNu · · Score: 1

    Here in Europe we don't have to pledge anything.

    Are we now officially 'The land of the Free' ?

  450. other harms of the Pledge by junkgrep · · Score: 2

    Consider this cogent point as well:
    "As things stand in most of the country, no atheist, agnostic or polytheist can openly and honestly pledge their allegiance to the republic. No matter how much they yearn to do so, there is no officially sanctioned pledge that they can take.
    The only congressionally approved pledge is reserved solely for the nation's monotheistic citizens. This wouldn't matter much if the pledge were just something you mumble every sunday like the lords prayer. Properly spoken, the pledge is taken, not recited. Taking it can be a privilege, an honor, or sometimes even a duty.
    When congress passed their law limiting the pledge to members of certain religious groups, they took away this privilege, honor, and duty from everyone else. That's not right.

    If an atheist, agnostic, or polytheist takes the pledge without saying "under God", they have not taken the official pledge of allegiance. If they do say "under God", they are knowingly making a statement that they believe to be false. I don't see how the rights of the monotheists extend to the point of forcing everyone else into an ethical dilemma. Even christianity takes a dim view of swearing false oaths. Surely it's unethical of these religious folk to force everyone else to either swear falsely, or forgo pledging allegiance entirely?
    The words "under God" are not essential to the pledge, except by law, but they do ensure that only christians and other monotheists can take the oath honestly. IMHO, that's a heck of a special privilege."
    -Squink

  451. Read it by Praeluceo · · Score: 1

    I pledge allegiance to the flag,
    Of the United States of America,
    And to the Republic for which it stands.
    One nation, Under God,
    Indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

    ...Indivisible...
    we sound awfully divided right now? I for one see this as a Bad Thing(TM), and can only hope that as this ruling moves its way up through our system of checks and balances that it will get overturned. It's been all of 9 and a half months, and we've already entirely lost our national "unity" and return to fundamental beliefs. I'm sure next they'll be saying that my local Community College which sports an "One nation under God" poster in most of the buildings will be required to take down their patriotic motifs due to it being an infringement upon "separation yadda yadda".

    I think that if Christians cannot be allowed to openly practice most of their beliefs on public property, and if Christian ideals such as "don't kill" and "don't commit adultery" can't be present in publicly sponsored schools. Then likewise the religion of "evolution" should also be regulated, and banned from our education system. I for one do not wish for my children to be indoctrinated at an early age with such cock-eyed ideas as the world took billions of years to form. Especially since the great majority of modern school text books contain "facts" regarding our planet's evolution that have been disproven in the scientific community.

    Ah, but it's only us, the intolerant right-wing Christian theists who aren't included in that freedom of religion everyone else enjoys. I see.
    And yes, you can pick my post apart, and say how I'm wrong on this, I have my facts wrong on that, or that I'm not defending my stance clearly. Perhaps not, but, as they say, "The truth is out there". Do try not to fall into the same pit of "closed-mindedness" atheists enjoy saying most Christians have fallen into, if you aren't openminded enough to honestly consider what I have said, and study up on it, how can you deride me for my beliefs without you yourself being closed-minded?
    It is also said, "The fool says in his heart 'there is no God'....for the time will come when people will not endure sound belief, but they will gather to themselves teachers after their own lusts. And they will not listen to the truth, and will rather listen to fables."

    1. Re:Read it by cisco_rob · · Score: 1

      I think that if Christians cannot be allowed to openly practice most of their beliefs on public property, and if Christian ideals such as "don't kill" and "don't commit adultery" can't be present in publicly sponsored schools.

      Look. No one said that you can't practice your beliefs openly or on public grounds. (See you at the pole Christian rallies before school?) The court ruling simply stated that no one can be forced into your orthodoxy. And no matter what your belief, you can't deny that being made to say, over and over again, ad nauseum, something that you don't believe is true, or having the vast majority of people in your classroom ostricise you because you didn't repeat something you don't believe in isn't infringing upon someone's rights.

      Don't hide behind the now popular "What happened to the rights of the middle aged white-man" theology that permiates through the Christian Right and resounds through the halls of Washington because of the people that have been put into place by the current leadership.

      And as far as "don't kill and don't commit adultury" being Christian ideals go, you've got to be kidding me. Cultures 3 times older than Christianity were executing their own for killing their own, and punishing people for breaking the union of marriage.

      Grow up. It's not poor pitiful you, you're the fucking majority.

      --
      "I do not fear computers. I fear lack of them." -Isaac Asimov
    2. Re:Read it by Airline_Sickness_Bag · · Score: 1

      Then likewise the religion of "evolution" should also be regulated, and banned from our education system. I for one do not wish for my children to be indoctrinated at an early age with such cock-eyed ideas as the world took billions of years to form. Especially since the great majority of modern school text books contain "facts" regarding our planet's evolution that have been disproven in the scientific community.

      No, the theory of evolution is not a "religion".

      It is a scientific theory that explains the evidence, just like the theory of gravity explains the evidence. The thoery of evolution is one of the best supported theories in science, and is the foundation of biology. So it should be taught in a science class.

      That the world took billions of years to form is supported by physics, geology, and astronomy.

      It should be noted that most of the major Christian denominations have no problem with evolution, or that the earth is billions of years old.

      -asb

    3. Re:Read it by pkesel · · Score: 1

      You are certainly free to practice your beliefs and promote them as publicly as you wish. I am just as free to laugh and ridicule the notion that you follow a charlatan and base your beliefs on nothing more than a book that's been translated and manipulated for over a thousand years.

      I'm also free to point out the inconsistency you maintain in discrediting evolution, both geological and genetic, which uses the same science that cures your ailments and predicts your weather. How can you blindly discredit one idea and blindly accept that part of science that helps you?

      I think you might reword your quote. "The fool says in his heart 'There is a God' ... for the time will come when reason will support sound belief, but they will gather themselves teachers after their own illusions. And they will not listen to truth, and will listen to fables." Tired fables that have lead to nothing but world-wide upheaval.

      --
      - Sig this!
  452. Constitutional context by LinuxGeek · · Score: 1
    Most people posting in response to this story have opinions and little knowledge. They either don't know what our founding fathers believed or choose to ignore that knowledge in deference to their own opinions.

    These two quotes give great support to your argument:

    "We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion...Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." ~ President John Adams in his October 11, 1798 address to the Military.

    "To the corruptions of Christianity I am, indeed opposed; but not to the genuine precepts of Jesus himself. I am a Christian, in the only sense in which he wished any one to be; sincerely attached to his doctrines, in preference to all others." ~ Thomas Jefferson from The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Albert Ellery Bergh, ed. (Washington, D. C.: The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), Vol. X, p.380, letter to Benjamin Rush on April 21, 1803

    Thomas Jefferson and many others of his era understood the vast difference between prescribing to a religion or church and understanding of and living the teachings of Christ. The differences are about as drastic as the distance between a picture of food and the food itself.
    --

    Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
  453. Atheists? You mean Agnostic? by charnerd · · Score: 1
    For all you slashdotters out there that claim to be Atheists, don't you really mean that you are Agnostic?

    I mean, if God boomed out "I exist and don't you forget it", wouldn't you change your views? Don't claim to be Atheists unless you are willing to totally discount the idea that God might exist, which IMO no logical scientific person would do.

    Instead, claim to be Agnostic. It sounds better, and let's face it: if you don't believe in God how can you believe for sure that there is no God?

  454. I smell a Jew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't you know, it is a Jew who is behind this decision.

  455. Re:What sort of lesson is Newdow's daughter learni by 0x20 · · Score: 1

    You're choking on the words you heard him say and not the meaning behind them. Yes, it is hurtful to have to listen to those words over and over and over - to be forced by the government to listen to them - if you've been brought up in a different belief system.

    It's not simply "not having to hear something she doesn't like." The actual thing in question is a state-sponsored endorsement of a particular religious belief and DOES NOT belong in the curriculae of public schools. It's perhaps the issue of deepest meaning to most people, second-graders included. (They're a lot wiser than you appear to think they are.)

    I would say, one, what kind of lesson is she learning from having her school pound God into her ears every day, and two, she might actually be better off learning that her government is really capable of listening and responding to the concerns of its individual citizens. That's what I learned and why this decision made me feel happy and hopeful.

  456. Time for a change by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

    If we're busy pulling things from 'The Pledge' how about "To the flag of"?
    It's time we pledged ourselves to our /NATION/, not some symbol. Pledge yourself to a symbol, and you wont care what changes go on behind it. Pledge yourself to the Nation, and make sure that Nation is what it should be.

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  457. Re:Atheists? You mean Agnostic? by EnglishTim · · Score: 2

    Not so.

    Atheist means that you believe there is no God.

    Agnostic means that you are not really sure whether there is a God or not.

    Neither position says anything about what you would believe in the light of new evidence.

  458. Not quite. by 0x20 · · Score: 1

    They're not court cases against tidbits about Jesus, God, Allah, Buddha, etc. They're court cases against state-sponsored endorsement of a religion. That's quite a major conceptual difference for you to gloss over.

    No one's saying that talking about anything should be outlawed. They're saying the government - which represents everyone, not just Christians - shouldn't force people to listen to the views exclusively held by Christians.

    Understand the importance? People should feel free to talk about whatever they want. But if the government makes you hear "this country is Christian" every day, then Christians are the only ones who feel free.

  459. Kind of funny for an European ... by jopet · · Score: 1

    The US always look a lot like, say Iran, with their President constantly talking about "god bless America", little lines like "in god we trust" on your coins, laughable discussions about the "scientific validity" of creationism et cetera. But then again, its not funny, its frightening, like so much other things about the US.

    1. Re:Kind of funny for an European ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice troll, but you've obviously never been to both Iran and the U.S.

      There are differences.

      And interestingly enough, with the strictest of scientific standards, you can't rule out creationism. I don't buy it, the way alot of Creationists do either...but you can't rule it out as there is no such thing as 100%. Europe is only as scientific as suits it's political agenda.

  460. love it or leave it BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    im not going anywhere. you're the one who's pissed; so you leave.

  461. No way, I just can't believe it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I knew there was a speech for people who, for any reason, wanted to be American. (I've seen Short Circuit 2).
    I didn't knew that childrens had to says those lines every day. It's a brainwash. I've only seen such obligation in North Corea and such like.

    I though USA were supposed to be a Democracy. (Or more accurately : a Moneycracy)

    1. Re:No way, I just can't believe it. by Praeluceo · · Score: 1

      No, the USA was supposed to be a Constitutional Republic, get your international politics right before rambling. It's a brainwash? No, it's a reminder. Like teaching children their letters or common expressions. A little reciting of a pledge to your nation helps instill the fact that your nation, and her God are important. Brainwashing would be a touch different, sorry.

    2. Re:No way, I just can't believe it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you are American. I think you should read what you replied. It's EXACTLY what I mean.

      We are with you, citizen, as we were a few hundred years ago. Freedom !

  462. Wake Up America [Re:Kind of a creepy...] by NullStr · · Score: 1

    Where are the voices advocating political freedom?

    from page 3 of the ruling:

    The relevant portion of California Education Code 52720 reads:
    In every public elementary school each day ... there shall be conducted appropriate patriotic exercises. The giving of the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America shall satisfy the requirements of this section.

    Just about every post in this thread is concerned with details of religious freedom. Doesn't the word patriotic worry anyone in the U.S.? It surprised me that such political brainwashing is actually prescribed by the State; but it shocked me that practically no-one sees this as a Bad Thing.

    Don't you guys even suspect that something may be amiss?

    :nullstr

  463. If your ancestors had held that view ... by vrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... the United States would still be a British territory. The ability to change the way the laws of a country are an intrinsic part of democracy, especially in cases like this where the change is simply undoing a past wrong.

  464. Not for me by PARENA · · Score: 1

    I myself am not religious and wouldn't want to state anything like that. But here in the Netherlands we have the same 'problem'. When the Euro came, I thought I would've seen the end of it, but no: on some coins are still (like with the former currency, the Guilder) the words: "God Zij Met Ons" (God Be With Us).

    --
    Here's the secret to immortality: ...oh dang, I forgot.
  465. Doh! by Arker · · Score: 2

    Why is what I said wrong? Everyone you mentioned in retort still had basic Christian beliefs with the exception of Jefferson. And why are Paine and Voltaire atheists? Is this your personal label of them? Voltaire would be on the possibly side based of his writings but not Paine.

    Umm Paine was called an atheist by the priesthood of the day, and a blasphomer, and even a satanist. He was actually a Deist, which is still in no wise a Christian or even close. Jefferson was a Deist too. I'm not sure about Paine. As was pointed out also, many were Unitarians as well, and Unitarians repudiate doctrines considered essential to Christianity by every mainstream Church. In fact, the people who bring this sort of suit to this day are very often Unitarians.

    The issue is a simple one, the first amendment clearly rules out any ability of Congress to spend tax money to endorse or indoctrinate any religion. You can believe whatever you want. You can say any pledge you want as a private citizen. You cannot take my tax money and spend it to indoctrinate my kid in your religion. That's totally over the line.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    1. Re:Doh! by pauldy · · Score: 1

      So you are passing off your views as being open and honest when you're actually just as biased as I am. You should know what people call you doesn't make you such. And even Deist believe in a god or creator. Given this your probably right about my comments of the Christians. I use the term to describe those who believe in god as a higher power and our creator.

      Now look at what you're saying and let me pose a conundrum for you. If using the word god in government could be considered religious and the absence of religion is itself becoming and organized religion of atheists. Then isn't fighting what already is government to get it out spending my tax dollars to indoctrinate my kid into your religion.

    2. Re:Doh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given this your probably right about my comments of the Christians. I use the term to describe those who believe in god as a higher power and our creator.

      I believe in a higher power. I am not a Christian. I find your use of that term to describe me highly offensive.

    3. Re:Doh! by muleboy · · Score: 1

      Your point would be valid if the requirement of the
      lawsuit was that the phrase be changed to
      "one nation, under no god". As it is, the lawsuit
      is asking that the government not affirm either
      belief in an officially required oath.

    4. Re:Doh! by Arker · · Score: 2

      Lots of people who believe in a god or higher power are NOT Christians. That's just ignorant, and offensive. We have a right not to have our taxes used to take our children away and indoctrinate them in Christianity.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    5. Re:Doh! by pauldy · · Score: 1

      How is this not exactly what is happening? By removing the phrase under god aren't you effectively removing god from this equation giving atheists what they want at the expense of the rest of the nations beliefs and values. Using the constitution as a basis for silencing religion in government is a major slap in the face to a great majority of Americans. If we must respect the fact that people out there don't believe in god then they damb well better respect that a great many Americans do. They also need to respect the fact that our forefathers believed in god as well. I looked it up and everyone on the previous list were people were referred to as atheist they were not. They all believed in god. Some of them just didn't believe he played a daily role in our lives.

      Over the past day and a half I have read more than I have probably read in the past two years. All I can say is from what I have read many of the pro removal comments I have seen in this thread while many are well written many are inaccurate and in some cases plain lies. The constitution does not afford us the right not to hear religion in schools or government it provides us with the security that we can practice the religions we would like without fear of prosecution.

    6. Re:Doh! by pauldy · · Score: 1

      Your calling me ignorant, I didn't say Paine and Voltaire were atheists and discount and entire country's religion to try and disprove a point that still stands. I understand the prejudice against Christianity now even though I didn't before last night. I can admit that referring to everyone who believes in god as Christian was possibly misusing the term. But this was based off my definition, which I clearly explained earlier that I viewed Christians as people who simply believed in god not people who practice Christianity. So I still stand behind what I now know is fact that out country was founded by people who believe in god and there are way more people in the US who believe in god than who don't. And if referring to these people as Christians is offensive then they are just looking to be offended and if that comment didn't do it any number of others would have.

      If anything the only thing your comments have proved so far is that you are willing to lie to prove your point. How credible is that?

    7. Re:Doh! by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      How is this not exactly what is happening? By removing the phrase under god aren't you effectively removing god from this equation giving atheists what they want at the expense of the rest of the nations beliefs and values.

      It is not removing God from society, it is removing God and religion from government.

      If we must respect the fact that people out there don't believe in god then they damb well better respect that a great many Americans do.

      I have no problems with people believing in God. Both my mom and dad have grown increasingly religious in the last decade or two, and I'm just fine with that. But the government has absolutely no place defining what theology we should believe in. In other words, the government has no place inserting Christian (or other western theologies) affirmations into, say, the Pledge of Allegiance like they did in the 50's.

      The constitution does not afford us the right not to hear religion in schools or government

      The Constitution very specifically disallows the government from affirming any religion: "Congress may not..." etc. It's very blatent. Don't try to interpret it as "it just lets you practice any religion," for that is NOT what it says.

  466. Strange - on what coins? by jopet · · Score: 1

    As far as I know all of the eight different Euro/Cent coins for the Netherlands have the portrait of Beatrix and the words "Betrix Koningin der Nederlanden" on it (which is pathetic in its own way, but doesnt mention god).

    1. Re:Strange - on what coins? by PARENA · · Score: 1

      Sorry for not mentioning: it's on the side. Not on the "heads" or "tails" part. *grabs wallet* Only the 2 Euro coin seems to have it now. Earlier, the 1, 2.50 and 5 guilder coins had it.

      --
      Here's the secret to immortality: ...oh dang, I forgot.
    2. Re:Strange - on what coins? by jopet · · Score: 1

      wow thats odd - I thought the side is not supposed to be modified for national stuff. Or can you use *half* of the side :) - will have to check the spec.

  467. welcome to the machine by jopet · · Score: 1

    obviously you have been successfully brainwashed.

  468. religion? by arnonym · · Score: 1

    religion is opium for the masses.

    don't believe it?
    palestinia, lebanon, irak, iran, abu sayyaf, taliban, waco, republicans, scientology, pat robertson, ... the list is endless.

    for me (i'm european), the usa are a christian-fundamentalist nation, comparable to iran and other islamic countries.

    i wonder if dubya is a creationist (what? the earth is not flat and the center of the universe!? can't be!)

    --
    sic luceat lux
  469. God Bless America by Stalyn · · Score: 1

    What does God have to do with government? nothing. So why does God have to be in a pledge to a government? He/she doesnt have to be, so why is everyone in such a fuss. Its not like God doesnt exist anymore he/she/it just can't be in the pledge and maybe currency. Who gives a shit? Maybe if you recite something 10,000 times you believe it to be true.

    Oh yeah loving one's country(patriotism/nationalism) should have nothing to do with religion. Isn't it possible for a person to not believe in a God or the Western idea of one ruling deity and yet still love and support the great Republic that is the United States of America? Our founding fathers knew this to be the case, that government should have nothing to do with religion. When you mix the two you start trouble.

    So just remove 'under God' out of the pledge. Its not like God will shun us now or something. God isnt a necessary part of government. God is based on faith of a higher being who created the universe, government is based on faith that humans can create a civil society.

    --
    The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    1. Re:God Bless America by daveman_1 · · Score: 1

      Let me see if I understand this correctly: You have a user ID of 662 and have only posted 21 comments, the earliest of which dates back to August of last year? Damn, you spent some time lurking didn't you? ;o)

      --
      Russian Russian Russian RussianDollSig DollSig DollSig DollSig
  470. Seperation of Church/State? by TheOddOne · · Score: 1

    Well, for one thing, I do not beleive that there was a mandate for a seperation in church and state. The constitution states that the Government Shall not create a state religion, but does not say there shall be No religion. This is the principle of the United States - Freedom OF Religion, not Freedom FROM religion. Perhaps it is time for a small relaity check on the 9th Circuit sort, and the Supreme Court for that matter

    Just my 2 cents worth...

    TheOddOne

  471. Satirewire... by tuxedo-steve · · Score: 1

    ... has a very amusing take on these shenanigans.

    Incidentally, it's funny what passes for `news for nerds' these days. I'm an Aussie, and read this site for Linux news. Star Wars news. Tech-related civil liberties commantaries. This site of all sites should recognise it's international readership, and the reasons for which people read it. Mod me down if you will, but I honestly don't see how news such as this is compatible with the site's `charter'.

    Then again, this article has had almost 2000 comments at the time of this writing. Perhaps I'm in the minority in feeling this way.

    --
    - SMJ - (It's not just a name: it's a bad aftertaste.)
  472. The Entire pledge should be illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Not being an american and therefore used to it, I have to say the whole idea of pledges to the state and flags in the classroom rather scary. It seems rather like some form of indoctrination to me

    Surely its the right of a citizen born in a country to disagree with its government or political system and therfore not wish to pledge allegiance to it (while still loving the country just not the people in charge).

    A government/state should earn its citizens respect and allegiance through good government, not by trying to brainwash them as a child.

  473. The whole pledge is problematic. by quag7 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The first problem is why say this at all? Why make it a semi-compulsory ritual to begin with?

    First of all, kids say this pledge literally thousands of times throughout their life to the point that it becomes a meaningless string of phonemes. The Pledge reminds me of, when I was a kid, listening to fellow Catholics recite the Profession of Faith on Sundays - so repetitious was it that no one even consciously knew what it was they were saying. You could tell by the emotionless drone; it made the several parishes I was a part of sound like some religious cult under deep mind control. (In reality of course it was a bunch of people trying to stay awake).

    Its not just the "under God" part I object to. It's the whole thing.

    I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.

    Well, what if immoral, sadistic acts are being committed under the name of that flag? The Klan flies that flag. The flag was on the uniforms of soldiers during the My Lai massacre. I don't think that the flag is evil, but it is subjective. Flags, like bumper stickers, are blunt objects that can mean a multiplicity of things to different people. If you're talking about the principles of freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and so forth, well, yes, I have a personal allegiance to those moral and political principles. If you're talking about our corrupt Congress and increasingly spooky President and what he's doing supposedly in my name, then no.

    And to the Republic for which it stands.

    Someone pointed out that the the flag represents the Republic. Well, if so, then this is redundant. Strike the "pledge allegiance to the flag" part and just pledge allegiance to the Republic. But even this is problematic. What if you feel the Republic is corrupt? I do. Not the principles this country was founded on, not even honest business and capitalism, but that this Republic represents these noble principles less and less as the years go by.

    One Nation

    Well, I believe that we are one nation; and that nations can and should be diverse and built around broad principles of civic morality. Tolerance, freedom, and standing up both for your own rights and those of your neighbor. Others may be into sedition. I don't know.

    Under God,

    I don't think God has anything to do with it. I seem to remember a passage in the Bible about it being easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. We are a capitalist country, and frankly, I have no problem with the honest, productive accumulation of wealth through honest trade and productivity. But depending on which part of the Bible you conveniently choose to follow today, it's questionable that God has anything to do with this. As an agnostic myself, I am not offended at all by other people saying this pledge, but why must it be institutionalized? It's not a matter of having a problem with the Pledge of Allegiance, it is the problem of forcing others to say it as well. That strikes me as very, very, unAmerican. I've said the Pledge thousands of times, and saying Under God doesn't freak me out, but it is wholly unnecessary. Those who support the compulsory pledge, should they consider themselves Real Americans, ought to have no objection to this being purged in a nation supposedly founded on freedom of - and from - religion. I don't understand psychologically what makes it so important to compel others to swear allegiance to their particular God. It sounds rather...Taliban...to me.

    Indivisible
    Well thank God this nation divides when our government is perpetrating one atrocity for another, whether it be slavery, institutionalized racism, immoral, meddling wars abroad, or blatant Nixonesque authoritarianism. Unity is only a value when it is attached to a kind of tolerance and moral consensus, not when compelled through the kind of propaganda we're dealing with right now where our own congress is afraid to do anything other than indulge any authoritarian whim our President has. Division, however much it lulls us out of our stupor and worries us enough that we can't be satisfied drooling at stupid sitcoms at night, is healthy. Division is cultural, moral, and political dissonance; it insists that we weigh our actions and values as a nation. What good is unity if it is under the auspices of jingoism, groupthink, and collectivism? Division ought not be a permanent state but I'm really thankful that people are willing to stand up and say, "I will not support this; not even in the context that we are both countrymen." How often did our founding fathers make statements about how a revolution every so often is a healthy thing? We ought to be able to sustain reasonable differences and remain united, but there must be a limit to this. Otherwise, there is nothing worthwhile about our freedom, or our Republic.

    With liberty, and justice, for all

    Well with tongue in cheek, it's kind of fun to say this line with a heavy dose of irony. As noble as this sentiment is - and it is perhaps, in its honest, untarnished form, the most noble part of the Pledge of Allegiance, it...well...doesn't apparently apply to many classes of people including foreigners, pot smokers, Kevin Mitnick, anyone serving a draconian mandatory minimum sentence for a petty crime, dozens of political criminals from the Nixon years still in jail and denied new hearings, trials, or parole. The justice part doesn't apply much to the wealthiest and most powerful who buy their way out of justice and wind up serving sentences at federal country clubs. Celebrities also don't seem to go to jail very often for the things the rest of us do. Victims of right-wing regimes we've propped up in the past are excluded here, obviously. And so on and so forth. The point is, if anyone should be forced to take this pledge, it is our *leaders*.

    I don't think anyone should be forced or compelled to take any pledge. It ought not be part of any compulsory institution like our public education system (Itself a huge waste of time and money). But if there must be a pledge, it should be something more along lines of:

    I pledge to be honest, to criticize my government when commits crimes or supports those who do. I pledge to uphold and fight for the values enshrined in our Constitution. I pledge to protest and throw my own weight against the eternal grinding gears of authoritarianism wherever I may find them. I pledge to respect and protect the values, practices, and expression of those who are different from me, even though I may find them objectionable, provided that those practices do not infringe on the freedom of others. I pledge to question authority, recognizing its legitimacy only when it serves the rational values of liberty, justice, and knowledge. I pledge honesty, honor, respect, and civility in ordinary discourse and human interaction. I pledge loyalty only to principles, and not the symbols, individuals, and collective by which those principles are corrupted. I stand in opposition to hypocrisy, dishonesty, and the use of violence except in legitimate retaliation or self-defense to solve disputes.

    To me, this is a far more American pledge.

  474. The whole pledge is problematic, in my opinion. by quag7 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The first problem is why say this at all? Why make it a semi-compulsory ritual to begin with?

    Kids say this pledge literally thousands of times throughout their life to the point that it becomes a meaningless string of phonemes. The Pledge reminds me of listening to fellow Catholics recite the Profession of Faith on Sundays when I was a kid. So repetitious was it that no one even consciously knew what it was they were saying anymore. You could tell by the emotionless drone; it made the several parishes I was a part of sound like some religious cult under deep mind control. (In reality of course it was a bunch of people trying to stay awake).

    Its not just the "under God" part I object to. It's the whole thing.

    I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.

    Well, what if immoral, sadistic acts are being committed under the name of that flag? The Klan flies that flag. The flag was on the uniforms of soldiers during the My Lai massacre. I don't think that the flag is evil, but it certainly is subjective and few can agree on what the flag means. Flags, like bumper stickers, are blunt objects that can mean a multiplicity of things to different people. If you're talking about the principles of freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and so forth, well, yes, I have a personal allegiance to those moral and political principles. If you're talking about our corrupt Congress and increasingly spooky President and what he's doing supposedly in my name and yours as the figurehead of our Republic, then no. Americans in particular seem to have a weird fetish for these kinds of symbols, and it is something which seriously distracts from the very real principles we ought to be talking about.

    And to the Republic for which it stands.

    Someone pointed out that the the flag represents the Republic. Well, if so, then this is redundant. Strike the "pledge allegiance to the flag" part and just pledge allegiance to the Republic. But even this is problematic. What if you feel the Republic is corrupt? I often do (I often believe as a nation we do many good things, but it is certainly a mixed bag). I have no issue with the "as written" principles this country was founded on, nor even honest business and capitalism, but that this Republic honestly represents these principles consistently is more than questionable.

    One Nation

    Well, I believe that we are one nation, and that nations can and should be diverse and built around broad principles of civic morality. Tolerance, freedom, and standing up both for your own rights and those of your neighbor. Others may be into sedition. I don't know. I prefer to connect myself to the world and others in the contexts of honesty and mutually beneficial community, but I respect the rights of those who don't and want to live up a mountain in Montana somewhere.

    Under God,

    I don't think God has anything to do with it. For example, I seem to remember a passage in the Bible about it being easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. We are a capitalist country, and frankly, I have no problem with the honest, productive accumulation of wealth through honest trade and productivity. But depending on which part of the Bible you conveniently choose to follow today, it's questionable that God has anything to do with this. As an agnostic myself, I am not offended at all by other people saying this pledge (or praying silently to themselves in public places - even government buildings, or putting up Christmas trees in parks), but why must it be institutionalized in this instance? It's not a matter of having a problem with the Pledge of Allegiance, it is the problem of forcing others to say it as well. That strikes me as very, very, unAmerican. I've said the Pledge thousands of times, and saying Under God doesn't freak me out, but it is wholly unnecessary. Those who support the compulsory pledge, should they consider themselves quote-unquote Real Americans, ought to have no objection to this being purged in a nation supposedly founded on freedom of - and from - religion. I don't understand psychologically what makes it so important to compel others to swear allegiance to their particular God. It sounds rather...Taliban...to me. Or suggests a kind of self-doubt and paranoia allayed only by consensus, the assuredness of hearing many others pledge allegiance to a God you have some kind of doubt about. I don't understand the motivation here.

    Indivisible Well thank God this nation divides when our government is perpetrating one atrocity for another, whether it be slavery, institutionalized racism, immoral, meddling wars abroad, or blatant Nixonesque authoritarianism. Unity is only a value when it is attached to a kind of tolerance and moral consensus, not when compelled through the kind of propaganda we're dealing with right now where our own congress is afraid to do anything other than indulge any authoritarian whim our President has. Division, however much it lulls us out of our stupor and worries us enough that we can't be satisfied drooling at stupid sitcoms at night, is healthy. Division is cultural, moral, and political dissonance; it insists that we weigh our actions and values as a nation. What good is unity if it is under the auspices of jingoism, groupthink, and collectivism? Division ought not be a permanent state but I'm really thankful that people are willing to stand up and say, "I will not support this; not even in the context that we are both countrymen and this is being done in our collective name." How often did our founding fathers make statements about how a revolution every so often is a healthy thing? We ought to be able to sustain reasonable differences and remain united, but there must be a limit to this. Otherwise, there is nothing worthwhile about our freedom, or our Republic.

    With liberty, and justice, for all

    Well with tongue in cheek, it's kind of fun to say this line with a heavy dose of irony. As noble as this sentiment is - and it is perhaps, in its honest, untarnished form, the most noble part of the Pledge of Allegiance, it...well...doesn't apparently apply to many classes of people including foreigners, pot smokers, hackers on trumped-up charges, anyone serving a draconian mandatory minimum sentence for a petty crime, dozens of political criminals from the Nixon years still in jail and denied new hearings, trials, or parole. People in internment camps. And so on.

    The justice part doesn't apply much to the wealthiest and most powerful who buy their way out of justice and wind up serving sentences at federal country clubs. Celebrities also don't seem to go to jail very often for the things the rest of us do. Victims of right-wing regimes we've propped up in the past are excluded here, obviously. And so on and so forth. The point is, if anyone should be forced to take this pledge, it is our *leaders* and people in the justice system. Justice applies not only to the poor and downtrodden who often get screwed by the System because they don't have the money to hire a decent lawyer, but also to the rich and powerful who rarely pay for their crimes.

    I don't think anyone should be forced or compelled to take any pledge. It ought not be part of any compulsory institution like our public education system (itself arguably a huge waste of time and money). But if there must be a pledge, it should be something more along lines of:

    I pledge to be honest, to criticize my government when commits crimes or supports those who do. I pledge to uphold and fight for the values enshrined in our Constitution. I pledge to protest and throw my own weight against the eternally grinding gears of authoritarianism wherever I may find them. I pledge to respect and protect the values, practices, and expression of those who are different from me, even though I may find them objectionable, provided that those practices do not infringe on the freedom of others. I pledge to question authority, recognizing its legitimacy only when it serves the rational values of of liberty and justice. I pledge honesty, honor, respect, and civility in ordinary discourse and human interaction (This of course would be problematic among most Usenet users, but that's a different rant.) I pledge loyalty only to principles, and not the symbols, individuals, and collectives by which those principles are corrupted. I stand in opposition to hypocrisy, dishonesty, and the use of violence except as a last resort in legitimate retaliation or self-defense to solve disputes.

    To me, this is a far more American pledge.

    1. Re:The whole pledge is problematic, in my opinion. by AForwardMotion · · Score: 0

      So are we all at a consensus that it is quite popular to hate everything good this country as a population at least tries to stand for? By the way it's One Nation Under God. Though there may or may not be a God. That was quite an intelligently put together post, and I completely agree with much was said at the end of it. Nevertheless I believe the pledge of allegiance was said at a time when the court system was not a complete joke. That thing means something to a lot of us. It has a sentimental value; a binding force if you will. But nowadays what in the world is constitutional? The Constitution is interpreted so many ways these days by so many people with so many different agendas that it a joke to follow by it. I say try to keep some ideals of what this country was made for in your heads! I don't know about you but I have a pretty good idea when I'm doing something for selfish or unselfish reasons, helpful or unhelpful, etc... Those are by which a court should stand, not some lawyer's twisted interpretation. The more 'by the book' this country gets about such a document that can almost be interpreted more ways than the bible, the more the vice tightens on every aspect of our lives! Don't hate the country, don't hate the flag, and please don't hate the pledge of allegiance! Once we start hating our own country instead of trying to make it a better place, we might as well pack up and go to another country (Try finding one that has any less of a track record of screwups, inhumanities, and racial hatred). Anyone with intelligence knows that any country/empire in this world no matter how powerful and uncorrupt has eventually become corrupt and consequently lost it's power. However America is still a great place. One day it might not be, but get a grip and realize that it doesn't have to become a cesspool in our lifetimes, stop nitpicking every little thing you don't like about it (Anyone remember the phrase "You can't always get what you want"?). Just get up and try and make the community/country around you a better place regardless of weather you live in America, the UK, Germany, or Russia. . Encourage ideals of human decency and maybe you'll give yourself a reason as to what the entire point of your existence is in the first place. PS - If I get flames on my grammar or punctuation I am going to dissect a living horse with a butter knife on your front porch in front of your kids and neighbors. ---- My agenda is to ruthlessly squash your agenda.

  475. Canada's Anthem is unconstitutional by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe the pledge is unconstitutional, however being Canadian most of the slashdot readers will probabally say I don't have a say in the matter. The fact is that God is mentioned several times and the Canadian National Anthem and even more often in my provincial Anthem. The problem with the Canadian constitution is that the right to religious freedom is protected, but to an extreme. Unlike in the US, removing religion from government would be unconstitutional in that it is your right to have religious representation in your government. I believe religion does not belong in government or schools. While religion has had its place in the past and there are still situations where it is necessarry, I believe we have developed enough as a species to do without it.

  476. Re:What sort of lesson is Newdow's daughter learni by the+gnat · · Score: 2

    I agree completely. These are the people who feel compelled to explain that they're atheists when you wish them "Happy Holidays" in December. They're also the ones who tried to get an atheist chaplain for my university. They're also the ones who say politicians should not base votes on their religious beliefs. Newdow is clearly one of those people. By his standard, C-SPAN is religious programming- can't have his daughter hearing nearly every politician in the country bloviate about God.

    Atheism, as commonly practiced, is just as much a religion as Christianity. Most don't simply not believe in God, they firmly believe in the non-existence of God. A subtle difference, but it matters.

    Now, if you'll excuse me, I have some chickens to sacrifice.

  477. Our pledge God-agnostic for 11 years... by rwa2 · · Score: 2

    Our highschool pledge of went something like this:

    I pledge allegiance
    to Queen Fragg
    and her mighty states of hysteria.
    And to the Republicans
    for which they scam
    one nacho
    unaware
    indisputable
    with licorice and jugs of wine for owls.

  478. Proof? by CPTDean · · Score: 1

    If God doesn't exist, who pops up the next atheist?

  479. Re:What the heck are you talking about!? And, why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Fact: *BSD is dying.

  480. This is just crazy.... by kko · · Score: 0

    I'm not an american, and I'm an atheist, but...
    a country's pledge of allegiance is as important a symbol to a country (at least to those that have a pledge) as a flag, or an anthem. You're not supposed to feel "offended" by it, or opressed, or whatever else you might be feeling. You're supposed to respect whatever symbols your country has, and you're supposed to love them. It's all meant to bring a sense of nationality, a sense of unity.
    I don't mind swearing by a third party that does not exist, but I would certainly mind losing all sense of nationality (especially my beloved anthem)....
    Now to all those weenies who feel offended by one of your national symbols: BOO HOO, YOU FUCKING SHITHEADS!!! (Go call your mommies and tell them some dork on /. offended you!!! use 1-800-COLLECT, fools!)

    What's next? The blind being offended by the "Oh say can you see", and the american anthem being declared unconstitutional??

    Perhaps the american people are WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYY too sensitive... Go watch Full Metal Jacket....

    --
    No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
  481. I find the creationism in US schools to be crazier by Kjella · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...maybe I've gotten a wrong picture, but from what I've read quite a few over in the US have a problem with evolution and teaches creationism (or scientific creationism, a contradiction in terms) as fact, or as a scientific theory.

    Frankly, it falls flat on it's face at the first test of scientificness, can it be *falsified*? You set up some assumptions, some consequences of it, and some things that would falsify it.

    But whatever "evidence" appears that the world didn't begin in 4000BC, it wasn't made in 7 days, man evolved from apes, it doesn't matter, because Creationism is always "right". It's like the story of the paranoid: Everywhere he sees somebody following him. When he doesn't see anyone watching, they're just pretending not to watch. There's no way to falsify it, and thus it's not a scientific theory.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  482. Re:Good for the goose, good for the gander by mpe · · Score: 2

    The US forces all immigrant to pledge loyalty to the republic, and to disavow loyalty to any other state before being naturalized.

    These people made a specific choice to become US citizens of their own free will. Specific conditions are placed on doing this, including making such a pledge and renouncing any citizenship to any other nation they may otherwise be entitled to claim.

    Why is it so wrong to ask that people who just happened to be born here make the same pledge?

    Since when can people choose where they are born?

  483. Easy, yes by JPelorat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is easy. I did it. Refused to say the pledge in junior high and high school and thereafter, because what it really is, is a form of worship - saying the pledge is worshipping the flag, and my beliefs precluded that. Got some weird looks, and some contempt, and then people quit giving a damn about it. I didn't sue anyone, I didn't even get offended that others were saying it. It's just not that big a deal.

    Face it, if you can't even stand up for what you believe in, you can't expect anyone to take you seriously later on when you start bitching about being infringed upon.

    All you angry types need to consider not just what the guv'mint might be teaching your kids, but also what your children are learning from *your* reaction to stuff like this - they're learning that everything can be solved with harsh words and lawsuits and hatefulness. Is that what you want?

    --
    Hokey statistics and ancient misconceptions are no match for a good thought in your head, kid!
  484. A word from the UK by prokofiev · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have read much of this with interest, and i can't help thinking that this is a step in the right direction for the US. Lat me explain. Many Brits, myself included, are a little confused by the passion with which Americans approach patriotism. Am I the only one who thinks it a little scary that very young children are swearing an oath to a country? Or a God? Any God for that matter. There was an interesting comment posted earlier in this discussion, something to the tune of "...in the current political climate you are either a patriot, or a terrorist..." Think about that, we now have Americans too afraid to stand out, in a country that makes children swear an oath to a political body they have little comprehension of. No offence intended, I'm just saying be careful, and perhaps for once the courts have got it right.

    1. Re:A word from the UK by tutal · · Score: 1

      The reason why Americans are so patriotic. No offence, but, we live in the BEST fucking country in the world. We have more freedom, more opportunity than anyone else. This may sound arrogant, but hey, when you are on top, you damned well better be proud of it.

    2. Re:A word from the UK by leek · · Score: 1
      You're absolutely right. Americans have lost their Revolutionary spirit, and are willing to bow to any leader or "God" that comes their way. That's why America risks becoming the next Nazi Germany. Hitler was popularly elected, after all, and he could flourish in America's current ultra-patriotism.

      Here is an excellent op-ed on the subject.

    3. Re:A word from the UK by CyberLife · · Score: 1
      No offence(sic), but, we live in the BEST fucking country in the world.

      A rather subjective statement. Not everyone believes this to be true.

      We have more freedom, more opportunity than anyone else.

      Do you know this for a fact or are you simply repeating what you've heard? Why not give prokofiev a list of these freedoms and opportunities and have him/her compare it to what's available in the U.K. I'm sure you'll be quite surprised. My girlfriend said almost those exact words to me once. She never said it again after I gave her a list of countries where those same freedoms are available.

    4. Re:A word from the UK by tutal · · Score: 1

      Hmm, last time I was in the UK, I had cameras staring at my ass all day. In addition, the US has the most open form of Capitolism there is (the freedom to succeed, or fail, financially). While our country was founded on religious principles (read Declaration of Independance and the many works of George Washington and Ben Franklin) our country does not have a state sponsored religion (as many European countries do).

      As far as other countries in the world, whether it be in Africa, South America, Europe, or Asia. Nearly every single one limits the freedoms of its citizens. Be it through state sponsored healthcare, high taxation, unrealistic environmental laws, or by limiting the ability of its people to determine their own future by any means.

      And finally in a world where money rules, America has economic superiority over all countries.

    5. Re:A word from the UK by Jesus+the+Annointed · · Score: 1
      That's why America risks becoming the next Nazi Germany. Hitler was popularly elected, after all, and he could flourish in America's current ultra-patriotism.

      Hitler elected? HA! As everyone knows Hitler was placed in power as a puppet by the world-wide Jewish conspiracy... actually he was... well just read this

      --
      Spreche Deutsche, aber nicht so gut, ja. :)
    6. Re:A word from the UK by CyberLife · · Score: 1
      Hmm, last time I was in the UK, I had cameras staring at my ass all day.

      We've got the same thing around here too. Every traffic intersection, office building, library, restaurant, shopping center, apartment building, you name it. Cameras are everywhere. We hope that most of them are privately monitored (many aren't), but whose to say if they really are.

      In addition, the US has the most open form of Capitolism there is (the freedom to succeed, or fail, financially).

      There are many other countries where these same market freedoms exist.

      ...our country does not have a state sponsored religion (as many European countries do).

      As far as other countries in the world, whether it be in Africa, South America, Europe, or Asia. Nearly every single one limits the freedoms of its citizens. Be it through state sponsored healthcare, high taxation, unrealistic environmental laws, or by limiting the ability of its people to determine their own future by any means.

      If you consider taxation over the lifetime of an individual or corporation, the United States has some of the highest rates in the world, especially if you're lucky enough to be successful. As for state-sponsored religion or industry, you're forgetting that in many areas the government competes with the private sector. It's not always a one-or-the-other kind of arrangement.

      And finally in a world where money rules, America has economic superiority over all countries.

      This is quite subjective. There are many who would disagree.

      There are so many people on this planet with vastly different ideals and notions of what's important. In the grand scheme of things, no country or government system is necessarily better or worse than any other. They're just different.

  485. I guess my objection by N8F8 · · Score: 2
    Is with the people who clearly don't understand where the compunction to force religion out of government came from and confuse the issue with enforcing a 100% exclusion from even mentioning anything remotly religious in a publicly owned establishmment. Just as community rules dictate where the local stip club can operate, its not necessarily a "free-speech" or "freedom from religion" issue, but more a matter of "what norms and values do I cherish and protect".

    Of course, I'm also against forcing any person to swear to an oath they don't believe in, but taking a quick trip down the slippery slope to "because Joey doesn't want to recite the oath, no-one is allowed to recite the oath" is well...sad. But then again, it seems more and more we are reinforcing a set of values in our society that says that taking civic responsibility or responsibility of any sort is not necessary.

    But then again, I don't see the big deal in pulling two words out of the oath. They always seemed to be patched into the phrase in the first place. My objection is only with the government forcing people to take out the words...or not allow the words to be spoken under any circumstance in a publicly owned establishment. I would also point out that this is yet another reason to question the government's near total forced molopoly on education.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:I guess my objection by markwelch · · Score: 2
      > enforcing a 100% exclusion from even mentioning anything remotly religious in a publicly owned establishmment <

      Fortunately, there are no such exclusions, and nobody is trying to impose such an exclusion. Of course, people who want to encourage or mandate religious intrusion into public classrooms and other public activities, despite the U.S. Constitution's "establishment" and "free exercise" clauses, will argue that doing so violates free speech. It does not. Students pray every day in their classrooms, and during classroom discussions, students may discuss religion in appropriate context, and may object to activities that aren't allowed by their religion.

      When courts act to enforce the U.S. Constitution's "establishment" and "free exercise" clauses, they are doing nothing revolutionary or radical, and they are not "anti-religion." Indeed, many of the strongest opponents of government religious activity, are protestant religious leaders: they recognize that although they might seem to "win" because it is their religious views that government usually seeks to promote, any such victory is transitory, as politicians may seek to use the power of government to distort their religious beliefs, and of course in the future some other religion may gain the upper hand.

      I don't believe in God, but I respect those who have religious faith. But I would like to believe that I have equal respect for Christians (of all demoninations), Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, Shintos, and any other faith, whether monotheistic or not. Including the language "under God" is much more offensive to someone who believes in a religion that does not worship "the One God," than it could ever offend me as an atheist. Mandating a pledge to God (or to a flag) is also an insult to those who believe in free will, choice, and self-determination, or who have critical thinking skills.

      --
      -- http://www.MarkWelch.com/ Pleasanton California
    2. Re:I guess my objection by N8F8 · · Score: 2

      Af if in response to my questioning of the government monopoly on education, the Supreme Court let the shool voucher system stand. Maybe sometime in the future, parents who don't care for the values taught in Public school can afford to send their kids to private school.

      --
      "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    3. Re:I guess my objection by UncleRoger · · Score: 2

      "because Joey doesn't want to recite the oath, no-one is allowed to recite the oath"

      That would be sad, and unconstitutional. And I would fight it, tooth and nail. But that's a whole 'nuther kettle of fish. This ruling isn't about limiting what the general populace can say. Anyone can say whatever they want (well, except for limits on profanity and libel (or is it slander?) and such). This ruling does not prevent anyone from reciting the 1954 version of the pledge. They can even recite it on school grounds. What this ruling is about is making sure that no one has to be forced to pledge themselves to be "under god" by a representative of the government. That the government should not endorse (even as broadly as saying there is a god) any particular religion. (Love them thar rights!)

      btw, I have, for 10 years now, given my (now) wife a lecture/rant at the start of each school year, about how having the pledge posted and making the kids say it is unconstitutional. Maybe this year she'll pay attention to me! 8^)

      --
      Stupid people will be persecuted to the fullest extent allowed by law.
    4. Re:I guess my objection by UncleRoger · · Score: 2

      parents who don't care for the values taught in Public school can afford to send their kids to private school.

      Now you're getting it! The government schools teach the basic skills -- reading, writing, 'rithmetic. (etc.) If you want something specialized, such as an education tainted by superstition, well, then by gum it, you're free to send your kids to a private school. If it's not important enough to you to sell your TV and give up beer to have your kid get a catholic/christian/jewish/muslim/antagotheistic education, well, then, it can't be all that important.

      It's not the government's job to teach your kids religion. (If you don't want to take responsibility for your kid's religious education, send 'em to me. I'll teach 'em about religion.)

      And lastly, those who vote for school vouchers (and who cannot afford a good private school on their own) deserve everything they get. Personally, if vouchers are ever passed here, I'm going to open up Uncle Roger's Private School, where you get a 10% cash rebate off your voucher (to buy beer!) and I'll plop 100 kids in front of disney videos every day while I vacation in Tahiti.

      --
      Stupid people will be persecuted to the fullest extent allowed by law.
  486. If I could... by kajiki · · Score: 1

    ... I would be down-modding half of all comments ranked 3 or up as "redundant". Great Bajeezus on a pogo stick, what's your problem? 2000+ comments over two words!

    If you hate the US government so much and find it so oppressive, maybe it's time to consider doing what your forefathers did - move?

    --
    What's a pretty troll like you doing in a dump like this?
  487. fuck you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cammander taco is a lame ass mofofalo like america.

  488. "one nation underground, invisible" by markmoss · · Score: 2

    I've been an atheist ever since I was 7 years old and my mother sent me to a Bible class. Whoa, Santa Claus is make-believe, but people actually believe this crap?

    Eisenhower was still president and I was reciting the pledge every morning. "One nation under God" never bothered me - but then, I'm not sure how old I was when I figured out that the next word wasn't "invisible"... ;-)

  489. Intolerance from the left by JackRipper · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I guess I shouldn't be surprised to see all the hate and intolerance against Christianity here.

    The liberals don't support vouchers so parents can send their children to the schools that support patriotism and religion, then they do all they can to remove such things from public schools.

    Sounds like a conspiracy to me.

    Face it. This country was founded by Christians. There's no way this was their intention when writing the constitution. These kinds of rulings are just a perversion. The founding fathers are probably rolling over in their graves.

    --
    Blow up the world!
    1. Re:Intolerance from the left by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WEll Jack the Dip shit Ripper.
      The British and otherwise European influences were often members of quirky Christian sects, among them the Shakers who had extatic orgies during religious services and I count among my ancestors. The Quakers, who were liberal fucks you would have hated, the Puritans who you would have loved no doubt and a zillion other freaked out christian like cults with totally bizarre lifestyles including homosexuaility, cross dressing and lots of drug use and drinking and generally low lifeness.
      George Washington grew weed to smoke and he left a journal about that and his love for tasty black pussy. Harvard in its early years could only convince students to come if they had free beer for breakfast AND lunch. Now tell me you fucking conservative idjiot, do you really think them freaks would give a flying fuck? Nah, I don't think so. How about you go fuck off and die and then you can roll around in your grave and cry.

    2. Re:Intolerance from the left by hyperstation · · Score: 1

      oh god, the christians are screaming "intolerance"....what a crock, you're the most intolerant bunch of all.

      nero should have burned you all when he had the chance. go ahead, mod me down.

  490. Pledge Unconstitutional, Talk Show Host Explodes by tenzig_112 · · Score: 3, Funny
    The following came from a story at Ridiculopathy.com.


    RUSSELL, KANSAS- On Wednesday, 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the current form of the Pledge of Allegiance, with its "one nation under God" line, blurs the separation of church and state and is therefore Unconstitutional. According to authorities, this event lead radio talk show host John McJay to literally explode while on the air during his afternoon drive shift on KQWE 1280AM.


    During the one o'clock hour, McJay ranted about the current situation in Israel and the West Bank. Later on, more news about the Worldcom debacle became more proof that "the world is going to hell, if it isn't there already." By the time news of the ruling broke, it was too late. McJay's faithful audience listened impotently as their host gasped for breath.


    "9/11 ... Enron...Steroids in Baseball ... Tag outlawed ... Worldcom ... [explosive sound*]"


    * While the exact sound of McJay's incendiary demise is a matter of debate among his fans, most described it as a something like a "wet thud."


    McJay is survived by two ex-wives, three ex-children, half a dozen ex-program-directors, and several thousand avid fans.


    In truth, the court decision is pretty much meaningless since it will not go into effect until it survives several rounds of appeals and the Supreme Court has already made it clear that it doesn't see a problem with the current Pledge. Of course, that wasn't enough to save poor John McJay.


    Immediately after the ruling, several dozen members of Congress assembled on the Capital steps to denounce the decision. After the camera crews had settled into position, they loudly recited the unconstitutional Pledge, sang the national anthem, and beat their breasts until finally soiling their boxers with red, white, and blue ejaculate.


    "It's a terrible kind of cynicism that would accuse us of grandstanding today," said Representative J.D. Hayworth of Arizona as he wrapped a replica of the 9/11 flag around his ample bosom. "While it may be true that we're all up for reelection this fall and this may seem like a softball issue, we're taking a taxpayer-funded break to pose for photos and issue soundbites for you, the American people. Oh, I almost forgot to mention 9/11. 9/11, everybody!"


    After his court victory, renowned atheist Michael A. Newdow told reporters that the ruling was "a step forward for civil liberties in America."


    Utah Senator Orrin Hatch admitted that the situation caught him off guard. "Civil liberties? I thought we got rid of that crap when we passed the Patriot Act."


    Senator Fred Thompson of Tennessee reminded his constituents that Constitutional rights work both ways. "Freedom of religion gives me the right to force my faith on anyone I choose, so long as my faith is popular enough to lend weight to my point of view."


    If the words "under god" feel tacked on, that's because they were, in 1954 to be exact. A proposal to replace the offending line with "One nation under C'Thulhu" has been rejected.


    Already citizens groups and civil libertarians are sitting down at the negotiating table in an attempt to work out a new compromise edition of the Pledge:


    "I pledge my tentative support

    to the woven nationalistic symbol

    of the United States of America.

    One nation, made up of diverse but equally valid groups

    under some sort of Supreme Being- or not, depending on your particular view

    with liberty and justice for most.

    I also preemptively apologize if this offended anyone.
  491. Press Secretary by mbbac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This morning I saw the press secretary talking about how ridiculous this ruling is. He gave examples of many other ways that we currently violate the constitution as if two (or multiple) wrongs make a right. It's just sad to see a nation adopt of the most despised properties of another nation that it is at "war" with.

    I really would like to suggest that if people don't like the constitution because it doesn't allow for a government sanctioned religion that they move to a country that allows that: like Afghanistan or something. Maybe they'll be fortunate enough to find a country with a sanctioned religion that corresponds exactly to their narrow beliefs.

    --

    mbbac

  492. Tom Ridge to the rescue by Oajhala · · Score: 1

    So when does Tom Ridge come out and say this court decision was just a misprint?

    oajhala

  493. Why are atheists so damn self-centered? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I mean, what gave this guy such an incredible ego that he thinks HE can tell my children how they should say the pledge of allegiance?



    Ok, that's a stretch, but seriously, athiests are the most ego-filled people I have ever known. How, out all of reality, they can think they are the highest form of existence is just plain stupid. Look outside for a while. Things work just a little too well together as far as nature goes for there not to be an overarching control or plan.


    Come off your high horse. You aren't the highest power in the universe.

    1. Re:Why are atheists so damn self-centered? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Come off your high horse. You aren't the highest power in the universe.

      So might makes right? Worked for the crusades! :)

  494. Where does man get his authority from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Constitution says God. It says God exists. The Constitution was written to stop the state from taking away your inalienable rights given to you by your creator and it aint talking about your mom and dad.

  495. under root? by haa...jesus+christ · · Score: 1

    admittedly i haven't gone through the 6x10^23 posts surrounding this issue, but where is your geekiness in suggesting alternatives? Why hasn't someone suggested the obvious change:

    under root ?

    as far as most of us are concerned, that's god.

  496. Judeo-Christo-Islamic... by ShavenYak · · Score: 1

    ...is too much of a mouthful. If you want to lump all three together, just say "Abrahamic faiths" since both Jews and Muslims claim descent from Abraham and Christians claim the spiritual inheritance of the Jewish faith.

    --

    Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  497. Secular ? by vu2lid · · Score: 1

    I often find it surprising (amusing ?) to find references to God in various "things" related to the US government ... May be there is no real separation of religion and state in US ?

    Compare this with my country (India). Even though religion and everything related to that plays a major part in Indian politics and society (much much more compared to US) one will not find any such references there ... Infact it will be a sure recipe for disaster if references like this are introduced in such a diverse/complex culture (compared to US) like India ...

  498. Unbelievable, shocked when I heard this! by wessman · · Score: 1

    Can you all believe that 2 out of 3 judges ruled that the U.S. Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional?

    http://www.networkofminds.com/networkofminds/searc hnews.cfm?q=pledge+allegiance

    ...all because of the two words "under God," added in the 1950s. The word God is on our currency, carved into federal and state buildings, spoken in court by witnesses giving oath, and most importantly, its in the damn Constitution itself!

    I am not a member of organized religion and fall somewhere between being agnostic and athiest, but I would still proudly give my pledge of allegiance to our flag and this country.

    The U.S. was colonized by those looking for religious freedom and this country was founded on God-like ideals.

    It's because of judges like these and stupid parents that file lawsuits that our country has become so damn politically correct. Freedom of Speech has no meaning anymore because what I say may offend some pansy-ass jerk.

    Whatever, the Supreme Court has already said that if this case makes it to their court, it's dead on arrival and the Pledge of Allegiance will remain legal and schools will be allowed to force their teachers to lead their students in pledge their faith in this country. God is not the issue, patriotism is.

    Zeropaid.com discussion of this.

    1. Re:Unbelievable, shocked when I heard this! by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      Right you are an atheist.

      What surprises me about the really religous people in this country is how they dont really follow their religion.

      Nixon who's religion supposedly denounced war willing killed millions in southeast asia. And you are obviously religous but you come on here and lie AND denounce God.

      tsk tsk tsk.

      Oh and by the way i am interested to hear where God is mentioned in the constitution.

  499. Won't last. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least a few people have the sense to see that one, small, angry, misguided man shouldn't be able to tell your children what to believe. Thank goodness this will be quickly overturned.

  500. Let's see what else is unconstitutional... by brian6string · · Score: 0

    Under the supposed "logic" guiding this decision, we'd have to say that the Constitution is unconstitutional, since it says "...all men are endowed by their Creator...".

    Think about that, the Constitution is unconstitutional...{infinite loop detected, shutting down process}

  501. Can't an Atheist be a good Citizen/Patriot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with you on that. Although I believe in G_d, I agree that "under God" changes the Pledge into one of "G_d and Country". The message that sends to our society is that "you cannot be a Patriot if you don't believe in a Judeo-Christian G_d". The last time I looked, religious beliefs were not a factor in serving your country as a solider or citizen. I know a stanch Atheist who served in Vietnam. Is this Atheist/Solider not a Patriot? Is he less of a Patriot than draft-dodger President Clinton, who would not hesitate to Pledge to a nation "under G_d"! Surely NOT!

    1. Re:Can't an Atheist be a good Citizen/Patriot? by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      Not according to George Bush senior, who, while campagining for the Presidency in 1987, said "No, I don't know that Atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered as patriots. This is one nation under God."

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  502. I'm the one who modded this up by Arcturax · · Score: 2

    He was joking, and it was funny. Hitler was mocked in cartoons and other media back during WWII. Today we mock the current state of US affairs on the web. We should not cut off all outlets of humor just because this country is going through a bad spell, if we lose our ability to laugh, then things really will be hopeless.

    --

    --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
  503. I didn't know that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is my two cents:

    First, I was against the ommision of under God until I read that it was not always part of the constitution. Now, though it will be difficult to get used to, I do not mind.

    Second, I think we have entirely too many laws. Most of these laws are made up by Christians who want to take away the freedom our forefathers fought for. This doesn't make sense to me. For instance, if someone wants to shoot crack and OD, that's that persons problem. Tax it! Tax it I say! As long as they are not harming someone else who cares? I'd rather cigarattes be illegal as they actually cause harm via second-hand smoke. Let's fight FOR our rights, not AGAINST them.

    From a Christian

    1. Re:I didn't know that by daveman_1 · · Score: 1

      Shoot crack? Is this some new method? I apparently have been away from the drug scene for too long. I thought crack was a rock you smoked...

      Also, you seem to assume that noone is being harmed outside of the individual who is "shooting" crack. You have apparently never lived in a neighborhood that had a crack house. Just to give you an idea, imagine an entire building of people who are fucked up at all hours of the day. Now realize that none of these people have jobs and that their habits cost money. How do you get money to support your habit if you can't possibly hold down a job? By doing lots of illegal shit, that's how. Everything from violent crimes(beating someone down with a bat for their wallet or purse, or just plain shooting them with the stolen gun from that dudes apartment they broke into earlier that morning) to theft and vandalism. Here's a lovely picture for you: Imagine you're outside one morning getting ready to go to work, when you witness some fucked up lookin' dude rip the CB antenna off of your neighbor's full size conversion van. Any idea what he plans on doing with that antenna that he is now running down the street with? If you thought "He's gonna make a crack pipe out of it!", give yourself a gold star.

      There are good reasons for many of our nation's laws. I won't argue that all laws are good because I strongly believe there are _many_ ridiculous laws on the books. However laws that discourage violent crimes are not among them. It is however debatable whether or not they help prevent such crimes from occurring in the first place.

      --
      Russian Russian Russian RussianDollSig DollSig DollSig DollSig
  504. As a Christian, I agree with this atheist by tigre · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Although I agree with many of my Christian sistren and brethren that there is a lot of hostility in certain areas of the government towards our faith, it is a self-reinforcing cycle. Christians feel persecuted and start flexing their muscle to change things. Their opponents feel that Christians are shutting them out and react.

    I personally hate any sort of equation of "American" with "Christian". It cheapens both terms.

  505. Thoughts on Separation of Church and State by PMadavi · · Score: 1

    While at first glance, the court ruling made in California stating that forcing children to recite the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools seems ridiculous, it is based on some very serious issues. First a little background on my position. My parents escaped the horrors of Iran, where Church and State became one, and as a result the freedom of millions of people was squashed, because of the rules of a specifc religious order. So, as an individual, I am adamant about the separation of Church and State. Some might argue that the term God, as stated in the Pledge of Allegiance, is not specific to one church, and while that might be true, the notion of God is specific to the Judeo-Christian/Islamic tradition. Buddhists, Hindus, Shintos, and many other religions do not share the same notion of God. Therefore, the issue of Church and State does exist in this senario, because "God" narrows it down to a few religions being affiliated with the United States of America. Even if the term "God" did not single out certain religions, it does single out atheists. Atheists have just as much a right to raise their children with their own beliefs as do any people who do believe in God. To force a child in a public school from atheist family, being raised as an atheist, to swear allegiance to a "nation under God" is simply unconstitutional. It would be like forcing children in public schools to swear to a "nation without God," regardless of their and their families beliefs. So what? It's just a few atheist. Big deal. Why can't the leave the rest of us alone? I'll tell you why. The lesson that history tells us is this: First, if you are in the minority, you must fight with fervor for the fruition of all the rights allotted you by the society you live in. If you do not, you will perish, and must accept the blame for your own demise. Second, discrimination has never EVER simply stopped with one subculture. Take Nazi Germany, which slowly added more and more ethnicities to it's hitlist, so deviously and effectively that the nation itself barely noticed. If you don't think that can happen in America, look back just 40 years, when African Americans were being hung in the woods by citizens, and attack by police dogs in the streets. What does that have to do with the Pledge of Allegiance? Well, once you intentionly disregard the rights of a single group/culture/ethnicity/belief system, you destroy the fabric of this nation. Now, I realize that this nation was built on protestant ideals, and that the founding fathers owned slaves and didn't think women should vote. However, as a nation, we have evolved from that. We have amended our Consitiution to declare that all people, regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality or belief, are entitled to the same rights. One of those rights is the freedom from religious indoctrination. So, perhaps all this talk of revoking the mandatory recitation of The Pledge of Allegience, at least as it is currently written, is not so silly afterall.

    --

    --What, you ain't know about them country fried sessions?

  506. Government should not legislate for a "God" by SilkBD · · Score: 0

    Any law, ammendment or government decision based or related to the acknowledgment that a "God" exists is inherantly flawed.

    There is no basis in fact that "God" exists and any legislation that assumes "God's" existance as fact is unreasonable and has no place in a rational and just society. (Of course I'm making a flawed assumpting that we live in a rational and just society)

    Not everyone believes in "God" and the government should not promote any such belief in any form. In light of what I've said, yes "In God We Trust" in our currency should not be there, songs related to God Blessing America and such are fine as long as nobody forces you to sing it especially in anything governmetn funded.

    Religious fanatics may hate everything I just said, but whoever said Religious fanatics are rational. When you don't have to think for yourself and simply read a book to figure out what you believe is real (bible), rationality is replaced with blind faith and you no longer are responsible for your actions.

    --
    00101010
    1. Re:Government should not legislate for a "God" by americanpatriot · · Score: 1

      SilkBD I can't agree with you more. You are sure to get numerous hate messages regarding your position, but you are 100% correct. The founding fathers of our country were wise to include the amendment separating church and state, but some in our government have lost sight of this and will attack those who disagree in the name of national unity. They are wrong. Our country was founded on the principles of religious freedom, and that freedom also includes freedom from religion if the person so chooses. Religion should be a private matter, between the person and his/her god/gods. The moment it's pushed on us in the public domain, we begin to lose our freedom to choose, because others put pressure on us to think a certain way. "The end of wisdom is the fear of God. The beginning of wisdom is doubt" -Clarence Darrow

  507. Riddle me this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If all government documents containing references to a God, Lord, or Religion such as the pledge, money, etc, should be discarded as violating the separation of church and state then why was the Constitution signed:

    "Done in Convention by the Unanimous Consent of the States present the Seventeenth Day of September in the Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and Eighty seven and of the Independence of the United States of America the Twelfth In witness whereof We have hereunto subscribed our Names,"

    The Constitution clearly says: "year of our Lord"

    I guess these revisionists would like to throw that document out also?

    :rollseyes:

  508. The flag speaks to them by Snaller · · Score: 2


    >I Pledge Allegiance to the Flag
    >Of the United States of America

    I promise to do what my flag tells me (of course if i actually hear a flag talking to me I'm a raving lunatic)

    >And to the Republic
    >For which it stands

    My country is always right and can do no wrong, regardles of what other countries say (even if we have to kick their ass!)

    >One Nation, Under God

    Now i believe in supernational creatures for which there is no proof, but that is ok since I already believe in talking flags.

    >Indivisible, With Liberty and Justice for All.

    How can it be indivisible when its full of small states! Liberty and Justice for all who can pay. Yup.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  509. Re:I find the creationism in US schools to be craz by WoodsDweller · · Score: 1
    It is easier to understand if you keep in mind the historical context.

    Centuries ago in Europe people were deeply religious. They burned the witches. They burned the Protestants. A new king would take the throne and they would burn the Catholics. Another new king and they were burning the Protestants again.

    People who did not think that was sufficiently churchy came to the US for "religious freedom".

    --
    There are two kinds of societies: sustainable and doomed.
  510. Please vote parent up to 5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The number of people who cannot recognize the difference between having religious bias and noting that many people have religious bias is disturbing. (Though i notice all the people making the lead-everyone-off-topic "you're talking about religious racism in a story thread about religious racism! you're racist!" are all ACs. Maybe they are the same person?) We need this one clearheaded post to stand up above the rest :P

  511. My children by Rupert · · Score: 2

    will not be reciting any pledge of allegiance. They are British and American. If at some time they feel they have to (or are required to) choose one over the other, then they can pledge that allegiance.

    --

    --
    E_NOSIG
  512. Clarification by the_truk_stop · · Score: 1


    My point was that if someone holds a peculiar belief that people named John Jacob Jingle Heimer Schmitt don't deserve to live (and that's a _religious_ belief to them, not an opinion), and the law says that that person is not to go out and slaughter the JJJHS's in the world, is the government-sanctioned law infringing on the person's beliefs?

    > you get that when you use extreme examples

    Sure. The point was to come up with something outrageous so any questions that would arise from my statements would be rhetorical.

    -- Truk

  513. God under flag by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Possible slogans for the upcomming War on the Constitution:

    1. Atheism funds terrorism.
    2. This is your nation. This is your nation under law.
    3. Salute to the flag of the United Animal Farm of America
    4. Don't desecrate the flag, desecrate the constitution instead! ;)

  514. Do you undestand "matter of principle"? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    No? Yeah, thought so.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  515. Our school was the center of a Pledge debate by oooga · · Score: 1

    Perhaps you have heard about it: in Wisconsin, our governer slipped a provision requiring the recitation of the pledge or the anthem daily at schools _INTO THE BUDGET_! Anyway, our school distric in Madison took a look at the law a decided that in Madison schools, we would listen to a lyric-less version of the anthem daily, perfectly within the bounds of the law. (Keep in mind that prior to the governer's law, we had never, ever, said or listened to the pledge or anthem in school, so this, from a perspective of a patriot was actually a positive development)

    The local reactionary press jumped on this school board decision and immediately twisted it WAY out of proportion, classifying it as a BAN on saying the pledge in school, when in fact all they had done was decide a uniform way to conform with a new law. Pretty soon the national press was on it, (never once to my knowledge running a story that accurately depicted the issue) and Larry King ran a show about it. A recall attempt was instigated against several school-board members, led by a former senator, whose son happens to be in my class (which thankfully failed miserably)

    Anyway, my point is the right-wingers in this country seem, for one reason or another, to place enourmous value in indocrination of our youngsters by the pledge. (Many of my teachers noted that they had the only profession they knew of besides baseball player that required them to stand for the playing of the anthem). I'm so glad a power as big as the ninth district court has finally had the guts to stand up to what is OBVIOUSLY AND WITHOUT QUESTION a unconstitutional, illegal, and mindlessly propogandistic counterproductive pledge.

    --
    -- Nerds on toast in the new millenium
  516. Nothing, what is wrong with you? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 2

    There are very few simple ideas to grasp here:

    -The Goverment can't promote any religious belief. Period.

    -The schools, as part of the goverment, are promoting a religious belief every time they force children to recite the pledge. This violates separation of Church and state.

    I am not religious and such practice offends me and I think it i unconstitutional. If you think it is fine good for you, but then don't complain when other principles that guarantee diferent freedoms are eroded by powerful religious groups with an agenda of making of the US an intolerant Christian country.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  517. Environmentalism == religion ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given the fundamentalistic beliefs of many radical environmentalists, does that make environmentalism a religion?

    Can it be that the EPA is itself a violation of government establishment of religion?

  518. The Children's Story by troublecat · · Score: 1

    Go to your local library and read it *now* It's by James Clavell, and it's got some pretty insightful stuff in it about how easy it is to influence children (i.e. the pledge of allegience). http://www.epinions.com/book_mu-2230924

  519. Godless Communists by dirvish · · Score: 1

    The pledge didn't even mention God until 1954:

    "Worried that orations used by 'godless communists' sound similar to the Pledge of Allegiance, religious leaders lobby lawmakers to insert the words "under God" into the pledge. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, fearing an atomic war between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, joins the chorus to put God into the pledge. Congress does what he asks, and the revised pledge reads: 'I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.'"

    Source: The Associated Press and Encyclopedia Britannica Inc.

    What's so bad about godless communists? Some of my best friends are godless communists.

  520. thats not lying by omission by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

    Lying by omission is when you ommit some material facts that make your statement intentionaly misleading.

    The pledge can never be lyingby omission because nobody uses it for information. Nobody determines whether God exists or not dependingon whats in the pledge.

    Itonly feels blasphemous toyou because you are used tohaving it there, and every body in the media keeps repeating thats its blasphemous ad naseum.

  521. Fine by me by Angst+Badger · · Score: 2

    Compulsory speech is already illegal. The Pledge of Mindless Obedience to the State should be no exception.

    Let me tell you a story. When I was a teenager, I had a bumper sticker on my car -- I don't even remember what it said, except that it was critical of some government policy or other -- that depicted an upside-down American flag, which is a traditional signal of distress.

    On account of this bumper sticker, I was accosted in a parking lot by a clutch of Nazi skinhead punks, beaten bloody, and with a combat boot on my trachea, coerced into saying "I love my country."

    Actually, I do love my country, but I have a bottomless hatred for those who, like those skinheads, would subvert the principles of freedom to force worship of its external symbols. I don't see any difference in kind between the Nazis who assaulted me and third-grade teachers who coerce students into reciting that ridiculous, subversive, and un-American pledge. The difference, if there is one, is in degree only.

    So the advocates of the mandatory pledge can take their political and religious doctrines and shove them up their subversive asses. You are traitors to the ideals of the American republic and idolaters of symbols you don't even understand. The next person who wants to violate my First Amendment rights that way will get a quick refresher course on my Second Amendment rights.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  522. The delicious irony in your post... by hyacinthus · · Score: 2

    ...is that you complain about the insertion of the "under God" into the Pledge of Allegiance in 1953, when _your_ religion, so-called (you _are_ a neo-pagan, aren't you?), didn't even _exist_ in 1953.

    hyacinthus.

  523. Next will be the money. by beetinkle · · Score: 1

    The next thing that they will want to change our money. No more "In God We Trust". So much for those signes in the local bar that says. 'In God we trust, all others pay cash'. Better yet if these people do not like the moeny symbolizing a "Religious" icon. They can use someone else currency instead. Where has all the common sense gone?

  524. Morality != relgion... by mstorer3772 · · Score: 1

    Correct. One does not need religion to determine that we're all better off if we agree not to kill/steal-from/eat/rape/etc. each other. In fact, Game Theory gives us the tools to PROVE THIS mathematically. Prisoner's dilemma and all that.

    But that doesn't mean we should discount religion in general, and Judaism and its descendants in particular. %90 of the 10 commandments can be proven to be valid advice in game theory. "Keep the Sabbath holy" is beyond its reach.

    But that doesn't invalidate the 10 commandments. If anything, it should support them. Thousands of years ago, people were given advice that we now KNOW to be good. People were given a creation story that is (arguably) accurate (big bang == "let there be light", plants appeared, fish, then animals, then finally man... birds before animals? oops.. maybe 'fish' should read 'reptiles and dinosaurs' but I digress).

    What am I getting at?
    -You're right, morality doesn't need to be supported by religion.
    -Does that invalidate religion? No... quite the opposite. Every time scientific reality and Christianity line up, that's just another validation of my belief.

    --
    Fooz Meister
  525. So what's wrong with a little indoctrination?... by bcwengerter · · Score: 1
    Repeating the pledge, every day in school, over and over, seems an awfully lot like an attempt to indoctrinate children, instead of educating them.

    Seriously, though, I think we need a poll. How many of you out there, who went through the U.S. school system and had to repeat the pledge every day, actually ever understood what you meant? Even after it was explained to you (if it ever was), did you REALLY understand it, or were you just able to repeat what you were told about it? maybe it's because I'm only of moderate intelligence, but I certainly didn't entirely grasp the symbolism concept when I was in grade school.

    Or am I the only idiot here like that? :-)

  526. Re:It'd be fairly easy to change - Overland? by Ssolstice · · Score: 1

    Regarding your opinions stated here, I agree 100%. I'm also interested that you mention Overland, Missouri; since that's where I grew up. I guess there's no way to email someone from these message boards, eh?

  527. words dont mean too much to kids by Spuffin · · Score: 1

    I too am for this ruling, but I would just like to add that I was forced to state the pledge and recite the national anthem every morning at school (in Louisiana). As a kid I never thought anything about the pledge; it was just words. I couldn't have cared less what the hell I was saying and I'm willing to bet most other kids felt/feel the same way. Just because you say something doesnt mean you understand what you're saying.

    1. Re:words dont mean too much to kids by daveman_1 · · Score: 1

      I second this. It seems most adults never gave a single thought to what the "pledge" actually means. I also find it ironic that something that was written by a socialist Christian minister could become something of a fascist tool of patriotism in a time when there was a communist hiding under every rug.

      Once again, making children swear an oath to something they don't understand is idiotic at best, outright brainwashing at worst. And please don't try to tell me that children can be made to understand what it means. If you have never had to do without freedom, you don't understand what it means to not have freedom.

      Swearing an oath to a nation that supposedly embodies what freedom is and being _forced_ to do it no less! Nah, just forget I said anything. Go back to your television. There are _no_ fascists in our government.

      --
      Russian Russian Russian RussianDollSig DollSig DollSig DollSig
  528. so.... by slackwalker · · Score: 1

    did they swear on the bible for this case?

  529. So if you aren't under god... by TibbonZero · · Score: 1

    ... then you are above god? Geez, that's more egotistical than me...

    --
    Tibbon
    tibbon.com
  530. Let's have a public vote on it,... by TibbonZero · · Score: 1

    Or better yet, a ./ poll.
    Are you..
    1) Under God
    2) God
    3) Above God
    4) Who's God?
    5) Under CowBoyNeil

    No seriously, I think that this matter should be one that is vote on publically. It perhaps at least would make people more likely to vote. And really, if you aren't Under God, where are you? Under a bridge? Just because you don't believe in something doesn't mean it doesn't exist, and MOST religions (with the execption of not having one...) have a God, which you are presumably under, NOT over. A god can be anything that you worship, science, computers, religion, ./, or even CowBoyNeil. I think we are all under a god, of some type.

    The % of people who don't believe in any god is fairly small. Hindus, have a god, Muslims, Jews, Christians, Buddists, etc...

    --
    Tibbon
    tibbon.com
    1. Re:Let's have a public vote on it,... by tao · · Score: 1

      Of course, the other way around can be said too; just because you believe in something doesn't it does exist. And a lot of religions have several gods. Oh, and you do mean "I believe we are all under a god, of some type.", don't you?!

      Oh, and I'd have gone for #4.

    2. Re:Let's have a public vote on it,... by pauldy · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the number of atheists being small according to episode 340 listed on the American atheist website there are "over 30 million atheists in America". I personally am finding a disturbing stereotype that I'm fighting hard not to turn into a personal prejudice. Most all of the information I have found is quite militant in content and has a sole purpose of removing all religion everywhere. Most all of it with regards to the 1st amendment regardless of weather or not the situation is even related with government.

  531. Most Posts! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Come on! Only 121 more posts to go! We can do it!

  532. One Nation For the Freedom and Equality of All by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly, I am not distressed about this situation at all. I think it is about time to get rid of the pledge of allegiance and replace it with a more inspiring Patriotic but worldy message.

    As someone kindly pointed it out already -
    the pledge didn't even mention God until 1954:

    "Worried that orations used by 'godless communists' sound similar to the Pledge of Allegiance, religious leaders lobby lawmakers to insert the words "under God" into the pledge. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, fearing an atomic war between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, joins the chorus to put God into the pledge. Congress does what he asks, and the revised pledge reads: 'I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.'

    Sometimes the audacity of Politicians just unnerves me. To use a message of unity and liberty as a pulpit of discriminatory fodder.

    I spoke with a co-worker this morning, who told me that this decision was wrong. She went on to say how and I quote, "Anyone who doesn't agree with our traditions etc should get the hell out of this country." She also believes in school prayer, ironically.

    What amazes me is how ignorant and pompous many Americans are, and I was born and live here. Americans walk on airs. Many Americans think they are immune to the world.

    Yes, it is important to invest in your own country. You should take care of your issues etc. However, you cannot turn a blind eye to the world nor can you think you are above everyone else.

    Many Americans are Christians, it seems hypocritical to me to adopt god into government proceedings, paperwork, and beyond. There should be a separation of Church and State. Without this we become as bad as the Talaban.

    People should be free to worship whatever god they want and hold whatever relgious beliefs they want. "Under god" should be removed from the Pledge of Allegiance. The god in this phrase is referring to the Christian God.

    Honestly, I am truly scared of what this country is turning into. We are going to either develop into a Police-State or have a Religious war.

  533. In the first amendment by gruntvald · · Score: 2

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, OR PROHIBITING THE FREE EXERCISE THEREOF

    1. Re:In the first amendment by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

      so where is god mentioned?

    2. Re:In the first amendment by gruntvald · · Score: 2

      In the small print.

  534. I hate niggers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really hate niggers, spics, kikes, sand niggers, rag heads, towel heads,
    faggots, bull dykes, burr heads, spear chuckers, jigaboos, to name a few.

  535. All in favor say "Iiiieeee" by unixdiablo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Our founding fathers had very low opinion of Christianity and the bible which they voiced in their personal life: (taken from THE FAITH OF OUR FOUNDING FATHERS, by Dean Worbois) " Thomas Jefferson: "I have examined all the known superstitions of the word, and I do not find in our particular superstition of Christianity one redeeming feature. They are all alike founded on fables and mythology. Millions of innocent men, women and children, since the introduction of Christianity, have been burnt, tortured, fined and imprisoned. What has been the effect of this coercion? To make one half the world fools and the other half hypocrites; to support roguery and error all over the earth." (SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS, by John E. Remsburg, letter to William Short) John Adams: "Where do we find a precept in the Bible for Creeds, Confessions, Doctrines and Oaths, and whole carloads of other trumpery that we find religion encumbered with in these days?" Also Adams: "The doctrine of the divinity of Jesus is made a convenient cover for absurdity." James Madison: "What influence in fact have Christian ecclesiastical establishments had on civil society? In many instances they have been upholding the thrones of political tyranny. In no instance have they been seen as the guardians of the liberties of the people. Rulers who wished to subvert the public liberty have found in the clergy convenient auxiliaries. A just government, instituted to secure and perpetuate liberty, does not need the clergy." " Of course "god" can be many religions... Christianity seems to have the biggest pull in our government.

  536. Post addage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Add postage

    1. Re:Post addage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Post of addage of postage adding?
      Ahhh.....post-addage postage. Trudat

    2. Re:Post addage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nay. posting addage of posting so that this story get some hall of fame-age

      tru dat neeeeeeeeeee

  537. "god" vs "God" by upper · · Score: 1
    As far as I know, there isn't any deity in any religion named "God

    Using it like a proper name, capitalized and with no articles, implies that it is a reference to the god of a monotheistic religion. Nobody uses it this way in contemporary American english unless they accept -- if only for purposes of argument -- the existence of the judeo-christian God.

    When it's used as a common noun, e.g. "Athena is a god of the ancient greek religion", you're right.

  538. poll request by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would like to see some sort of a three part poll. First part: It would be interesting to see especially with the massive amount of feedback for this story, who agrees and who disagrees with the ruling. The second part would be for those who agree, what is their religious affiliation (or lack of). The third would be for those who disagree, what is their religious affiliation (or lack of).

    People have all sorts of reasons why they don't have to follow the law. Usually it is religious in nature. Like Eisenhower, signing a violation of the separation of church and state into law (well so I'm baised).

  539. What ever happened to the United States itself? by IcePop456 · · Score: 1

    We live in a free society, but that doesn't mean we do not exist as a nation. I constantly hear how great the US diversity (both religiously and culturally) is. And I agree, diversity is something special. However, the US is its own nation, with its own culture and standards. There is absolutely nothing wrong with saluting a flag every morning. A flag is a symbol. It stands for the US and everthing it represents. That's why people burn it in other countries. They hate us AND our beliefs. That's fine. If you burn the flag here, I think you should be deported. It directly means you hate our nation and our beliefs. We live in a free society. With that, you are free to leave.

    If you can tell me how forcing inconsiderate and growing children to at least stand salute the flag is propaganda, I'd love to hear it. This is the US and the Pledge is supporting our country. I, for one, do not obviously agree with everything our country does, but that doesn't mean I am not will to stand up and respect it. I live here. I may be of Irish/German descent, but I'm 100% American. If we need propaganda to brain wash our children into thinking that the USA is a good place, then that sounds like child abuse. If it was such a BAD place, competent parents would move to another country to give their children the best possible and humane living conditions. Places where they are free to complain, free to sit on their butts all day, free to say "Thank the supreme value because if I say god I may offend someone". Someplace, like....

    [No need to reply saying, "well, technically, peole from Mexico are American too because they are on the same continent", you know what I mean]

    Now, for all the people who can't get over the words "under God", we need to look at it more closely. I don't believe in God. I do not care if you do or don't. You have a mind, use it to decide what you want, that is what I did. But, I do have the ability realize that MY GOD, is not a religious God and your god may be my God, Bin Laden's God, Michael Jackson, or you may worship everyone in N'Sync. Let's take a look at the word God and other words in the Webster dictionary...

    Polythesim: belief in or worship of more than one god

    --Does this mean, the belief in multiple Christian Gods? Or do we have to rewrite the dictionary to clearly indicate what God means? Let's look at the definition of God?

    God: 1 capitalized : the supreme or ultimate reality: as a : the Being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness who is worshiped as creator and ruler of the universe b Christian Science : the incorporeal divine Principle ruling over all as eternal Spirit : infinite Mind 2 : a being or object believed to have more than natural attributes and powers and to require human worship; specifically : one controlling a particular aspect or part of reality 3 : a person or thing of supreme value 4 : a powerful ruler

    ----Where does it say that God has to be Christian? Granted, Part 1b says Christian, but I think there's a coincidence that Christians actually call their God, God. So, it would be wrong for Webster to leave that out, since it is a true definition of the word. I believe in #3 for example.

    If the court said to change God to god, then I would agree. But since we can't speak with Captial letters, and the entire complaint to the court was over the spoken allegiance, that point is irrelvant.

    So, "one nation, under a supreme value" is not so offensive, but god is easier to say.

    Therefore, by saying the word god by no means requires the belief in Jesus, or any other specific religion. Saying the Pledge, by its title, is showing Allegiance to the COUNTRY and NOT to a religion and likewise is not a prayer. When I'm about to jump out of a plane while going skydiving, I definitely will not say the Pledge of Allegiance. Like many previous posts, someone is always offended. I'm probably offending many English majors with what I'm writing here. Given the Webster definition, using god on money and in the Pledge, does not dictate what religion, or even if we should have one. Language is a tool to communicate an idea. The ideas behind "under god" and "in god we trust" are high morals, respect, and decency, not of worship.

    Therefore, deal with it.

    Our basic freedoms:

    1) Freedom of speach = Freedom not to speak = Freedom to say what you like. "One nation under Barny..." Why not just salute the flag and keep your mouth shut? It is unarguably unconstitutional to make some say the Pledege.

    2) Free will = Free to go.

    And my last comment is, people have to stop being so paranoid. Believe it or not, the country is not out to get you. The Pledge may use the word "God" but that doesn't mean if you don't believe in a Christian god, that the flag is going to jump off the pole and hit you on the head. Take things at face value and in context. Your kid's first grade teacher, or your kids school, is not trying to covert their religion. They are simply demonstrating and showing respect for the country we live in. If you hate this country so much that you can't stand showing respect for it, leave.

    1. Re:What ever happened to the United States itself? by Eric+Smith · · Score: 2
      If you burn the flag here, I think you should be deported.
      On what basis?
      It directly means you hate our nation and our beliefs.
      Perhaps. Or it might mean that you hate our government, which is quite possible to do without hating our country; the country encompasses much more than the government. Or it might mean something else entirely. The flag is merely a symbols, and it may mean different things to different people. As Mark Twain said, "To be loyal to rags, to shout for rags, to worship rags, to die for rags--this is loyalty to unreason, it is pure animal."
      We live in a free society. With that, you are free to leave.
      You are also free to stay, even if your beliefs and actions are unpopular.
      This is the US and the Pledge is supporting our country.
      How does it support our country? Will having children recite the pledge keep someone here from going hungry, or put a roof over their head? Will it change the outcome of a battle, or prevent foreign terrorists from crashing airliners into skyscrapers?
      Therefore, by saying the word god by no means requires the belief in Jesus, or any other specific religion.
      The First Amendment says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." It doesn't say "specific religion." Having the words "under God" or even "under god" in the pledge certainly is "respecting an establishment of religion," even if it isn't a specific religion.
      So, "one nation, under a supreme value" is not so offensive, but god is easier to say.
      The core issue isn't offensiveness. But "under a supreme value" is just as offensive to me as "under God," since I do NOT believe in a "supreme value".

      If Congress wants to fix this problem, they should simply remove the words "under God," which were only added as part of McCarthy's Communist scare anyhow.

    2. Re:What ever happened to the United States itself? by IcePop456 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps. Or it might mean that you hate our government, which is quite possible to do without hating our country; the country encompasses much more than the government. Or it might mean something else entirely. The flag is merely a symbols, and it may mean different things to different people. As Mark Twain said, "To be loyal to rags, to shout for rags, to worship rags, to die for rags--this is loyalty to unreason, it is pure animal."

      Now you know why I'm not a big fan of books. A Flag usually represents the country as a hole. The good, the bad, and the ugly

      You are also free to stay, even if your beliefs and actions are unpopular

      This is true. But that does not give you a right to deface a nation. That is exactly what is happening. Do the people in the US who burn the flag feel the same way as the people in Pakistan who burn the flag during our war on terror? They both give the same message.

      How does it support our country? Will having children recite the pledge keep someone here from going hungry, or put a roof over their head? Will it change the outcome of a battle, or prevent foreign terrorists from crashing airliners into skyscrapers?

      Do you honestly feel removing "under god" or being polictally correct in our laws will protect our country from terrorist? That has to be the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Going hungry and homeless won't be changed either. You may blame the government's policies on that, I blame irresponsible people. You can't prove that saying the Pledge will not change the outcome of a battle just like you can't prove removing "under god" will change the outcome either.

      The First Amendment says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." It doesn't say "specific religion." Having the words "under God" or even "under god" in the pledge certainly is "respecting an establishment of religion," even if it isn't a specific religion.

      This is exactly why I quoted the definition of God. As you can see, it does not clearly define "religion". So as soon as someone, like you did, mentions the responsiblities of Congress, it is irrelevant.

      The core issue isn't offensiveness. But "under a supreme value" is just as offensive to me as "under God," since I do NOT believe in a "supreme value".

      Ahh, the core issue IS offensiveness. The guy who brought this case to court was offend that his daughter was led by a teacher in a public school. I guess you're offended, by the word offensive. A supreme value can be anything. You may believe in nothing. That has a value of 0. My supreme value may be 39343, althought it is probably 0. My point was that the word god means manythings. Unfortunately paranoid, low-selfesteem people cannot understand that it is more of a "saying" than of "preaching".

      If Congress wants to fix this problem, they should simply remove the words "under God," which were only added as part of McCarthy's Communist scare anyhow.

      I see you are suffering from a paranoid lifestyle. If you can show me the link between "under god" and a communist government like Russia had, I'm sure it will be a good read. I think there is no real problem. It is not like world peace, or global warming is going to go away if these words are removed or changed. If people can realize there's a difference betwene god and christian god, than they will see how silly this is. And since you couldn't pick that out, it is a good thing you did not quote my polytheism definition and response. I wonder how my parents made it in life, given they grew up with "under god" just like I did.

      The funniest post, truly is the person who said, "Thank God". People can read into that one as much as they would like. Just like they can with the people who say, "I could careless" That means you care, which is not the intent of the saying.

  540. School vouchers OK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Supreme court rules that school vouchers are A-OK in the USA.

    I guess you can see that the screwy 9th circuit court will be overturned yet again by the Supremes. Yay!

    My message to the libs -- Tough titty! (Hillary's hah).

  541. Re:Is Open Source the answer? by Dastardly · · Score: 1

    To my mind, making "under God" a required part of the Pledge would be prohibiting free exercise of religion, but so would omitting it. So, make it optional. Case closed, can everyone be happy now?

    This is something I find somewhat interesting in that congress specifically made a law to add "under God" to the pledge of allegiance. Is there any other act of congress that anyone can mention that specifically refers to God? Doesn't this fit the literal reading of the first amendment that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion". I think the ruling screwed up slightly in that the real ruling should have been that the act to add the words to the pledge was unconstitutional, and thereby revert the pledge to pre-195x wording.

  542. Help protest the governmental usage of "God"... by Nicodem-X · · Score: 1

    ...by inking out the word "god" on American currency. These is supposed to be a separation between church and state and the government should be playing by its own rules. The sad thing is that both the executive and legislative branches have officially denoucned the decision and the decision will probably be struck down by the Supreme Court. This is why we need to protest by inking out the word "God" on all paper money.

    If you believe in God, that's fine. But your beliefs should not be forced onto others. All of the people complaining about the decision that the Pledge is unconstitutional would most certainly be for it if the Pledge said "One nation under Shiva" or "One nation under Beelzebub" or "One nation under Nothingness".

    People need to stop being so closed minded and at least try to see things from other peoples' perspectives instead of assuming that they are always right. Especially when they assume that they are right about something that isnt even tangible.

    1. Re:Help protest the governmental usage of "God"... by IceWedge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My dear uneducated friend.. the key words in the phrase here are "Church" & "State". The laws say nothing about "GOD" & "State" or "Religion" & "State". The Foundation of that law was to see that no ONE religion was to have undue influence on the United States Government; as was the major problem with the "CHURCH" of England. Thus leading to the rebellion of the colonists and the foundation of the country that gives people the right to spout their opinions whether or not they know what they're talking about...

  543. Judge has put his own decision on hold by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The judge has now had second thoughts. He has put his own decision on hold, and may reverse it entirely in the next couple of days.

  544. 1954 Vote by seris · · Score: 1

    As many news articles mention, the words "under God" were added in 1954 by an act of the Congress.
    Does anyone know where to find out by what margin
    that act was passed, and who voted for or
    against it? I am hoping it wasn't passed unanimously.

    1. Re:1954 Vote by Kredal · · Score: 2

      It was passed 99-0. Sorry.

      --
      Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
  545. Matt Groening's suggestion might work... :) by CraigParticle · · Score: 1

    Haven't seen this posted yet. :)

    "I pledge impertinence
    to the flag waving,
    of the unindicted co-conspiritors of America,
    and to the Republicans
    for which I can't stand,
    one abomination,
    underhanded fraud,
    indefensible,
    with Liberty and Justice...
    Forget it."
    from "Life in Hell"

    See, it could be worse. :)

    Given that the original 1954 ruling adding "Under God" to the Pledge was made for mostly political reasons at a time when the US was concerned about being clearly distinguishable from "godless communists", it should not be seen as a horrible action if those two words were removed. Not as if it were an attack on the Pledge itself; merely a rollback to the way it was in 1953. As far as I know, this in no way threatens the state of the Union...

    On the other hand, I'm not entirely convinced that the change is really necessary either. We surely should be working harder to preserve the freedoms themselves, than worry about a Pledge that people regurgitate from instinct, rather than understanding and belief.

    What *is* alarming is the furor, akin to a lynch-mob, that has erupted over this issue. The irony of protecting a piece of cloth or a Pledge at all cost, while slowly selling out the freedoms that they represent, is frightening.

    Think about that very carefully as you spend tonight or tomorrow morning stuck in rush hour traffic. How free are you, really? Do you feel that you are really in a representative democracy, and that your voice will matter? Or just a rat, indoctrinated by corporate marketing since age 5, running in someone else's arbitrary maze?

    There has to be hope. How do we make this better?

  546. Pete by TheDarkRogue · · Score: 1

    Tie Pete For President!

    --
    (Score:0, Interesting)
  547. Zelazny's agnostic prayer by Cave+Newt · · Score: 1
    This seems as timelessly relevant as ever:

    Insofar as I may be heard by anything, which may or may not care what I say, I ask, if it matters, that you be forgiven for anything you may have done or failed to do which requires forgiveness. Conversely, if not forgiveness but something else may be required to insure any possible benefit for which you may be eligible after the destruction of your body, I ask that this, whatever it may be, be granted or withheld, as the case may be, in such a manner as to insure your receiving said benefit. I ask this in my capacity as your elected intermediary between yourself and that which may not be yourself, but which may have an interest in the matter of your receiving as much as it is possible for you to receive of this thing, and which may in some way be influenced by this ceremony. Amen.

    (from Roger Zelazny's Creatures of Light and Darkness, copyright 1969)

    --
    -- GRR: Newtware, PNG Group, AlphaWorld Map, Info-ZIP, Google cluster infrastructure, ...
  548. How dense can you possibly be? by Arker · · Score: 1

    A majority, even if it were not so ludicrously defined, would not entitle you to tax me to pay to indoctrinate my child in your religion. I haven't lied about anything, and all that stands is you've proven your ignorance yet again.

    --
    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
    Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    1. Re:How dense can you possibly be? by pauldy · · Score: 1
      I guess I'm just dense enough to understand that you know very little about democracy and majority rules. I'm also dense enough to read this and understand what is says. I'm also dense enough to understand this affords you the right to practice your own religion and call me dense or ignorant if you so desire.

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.


      I'm also dense enough that I understand now why this is in there.

      The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.


      I'm also dense enough to understand that people in general are really feeling worn down by others who are claiming their rights are being violated because they were picked on as children just to suit their current cause. You vote just like the rest of us for your representation in office. You also have the ability to transfer your child to a non public school or home school.

      So with that I said I'm sorry if you were picked on. It is the fault of those who picked on you for being so un-accepting. I know were I came from things have never been like that. It does not excuse the bending of truth in your first post or the name-calling. And are you sending the message of acceptance when you say that by saying the words in god we trust we are offending atheists and "indoctrinating your children" into our beliefs.
  549. I would propose... by tuxedo-steve · · Score: 1

    ... as a replacement, in the words of Lisa Simpson:

    ``One nation, under the dollar, with liberty and justice for none.''

    --
    - SMJ - (It's not just a name: it's a bad aftertaste.)
  550. ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the pledge sucks ass anyways who gives a shiat.

    cmder taco sucks ass who gives a shiat.

    ya fuck you.

  551. Re:I think this is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, I like you too !

  552. hell� my n�me is n�gger j�w. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, but that same chill, the one which has aged Mr. Johnson, has made my nipples stiff
    and erect, standing proud and tall like two flagpoles challenging a stiff March breeze.

  553. Nation Was and IS founded under God... by IceWedge · · Score: 1

    Now, I realize many won't agree with this. In this forum I'm sure to draw a lot of fire, but had to speak my mind. Many will dispute it, try to quote founding Father's out of historical context, not to mention tell out and out lies to attempt to discredit the notion; but this country was founded by people who believed in God and this Nation's laws and documents of governance readily proclaim it. The Constitution makes reference to a fundamental belief in God (4 times I believe). Congress & the Supreme Court makes reference to it in every session. Our money refers to it and our Pledge of Allegiance pays homage to it. The Separation of Church & State has nothing to do with the separation of "God" & "State" or "Religion" & "State". The whole point of that provision was that no "Church" would or should have dominion to dictate to the Government. That doesn't mean that as a nation we can't subscribe to a belief in a higher power.. that being God. Nor does it mean that we shouldn't promote our belief in God in our Government Processes and laws. When interpretation of the law is left to those who can't think for themselves, but rather choose to distort the Constitution for their own purposes.. it's a bit sad. What brings all of this up? (In case you just happen to stumble into this...) This surreal ruling by a S.F. Federal Judge. (Which is currently On Hold). A ruling called "ridiculous" by our President and disputed by politicians and civil servants across the gamut. I believe in a person's right to believe in God, or not. I believe in a person's freedom to make their own choices; to the extent they don't override or inhibit another person from exercising their right to do the same. That's what our forefathers spoke of when they discussed those "unalienable rights". (so noted in the Federalists Papers) I realize that the father and the ACLU are trying to make a point, and they think they're in the right, but truth be told it's the inspired laws and constitution of this land, derived by people with faith and hope in a higher power, that give them the right to "choose" to not believe. They want to separate Church & State, but have missed the entire point of the argument; which actually has precious little to do with Schools and more to do with allowing religion to influence government. People will argue that the forefathers didn't believe in God, or more specifically Christianity. Does the pledge say anything at all about a "Christian God"? It simply says "God", a higher power, someone who rules above us all, and someone whose existence is indisputable. (Though many will try and fail to belabor the point.) Benjamin Franklin has said, "Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become more corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters." The 2nd grade student (who probably didn't care one way or the other and only became distressed after being bantered on the subject by her father who is taking this issue to court to further his own personal beliefs, and to further the liberal agenda, rather than let his daughter learn and make an informed decision for herself.) was never forced to stand and recite the pledge. Sure, one could say she might be intimidated by the entire class standing, and reciting the pledge, but that's what's great about America: 1)You have the right to choose. 2)The majority of the people believe in God 3)Each of us has the right to learn to accept, respect and perhaps even revere people who think, act or choose to worship in ways different than we do; while receiving the same courtesy from them. 4)We choose our strengths, and pick our battles. 5)Only we can allow someone to make us feel inferior. This cannot be done without our consent. In this day of Political Correctness, too much emphasis is being placed on "not offending a single person" instead of learning to appreciate and celebrate the actual differences and rejoice in the striking similarities that make us humane and feeling people. Diversity does not mean that we must all think and act alike. It does not mean that we should all believe the same things. It does mean that we should appreciate and respect each other's differences. People need to be strong. They need to let more "roll off their backs" and not rise so quickly to offense and litigation. They need to think for themselves, rather than letting their social or ethnic backgrounds "tell" them how or what they should think. George Washington explained it as such, "Human rights can only be assured among a virtuous people. The general government . . . can never be in danger of degenerating into a monarchy, an oligarchy, an aristocracy, or any despotic or oppressive form so long as there is any virtue in the body of the people." I've lived outside the U.S., in a country where they did not enjoy the same liberties and freedoms that we do. A country where people were just as diverse as we are here, and yet people did not consider themselves as white, black, or yellow. They all spoke the same language and were patriots of their own country. They appreciated and respected each other. They mingled and socialized freely. It was refreshing to be accepted among them, yet here where we have more freedoms and privileges than many know how to manage, people go out of their way to be offended, when it would be so easy to think... step back... and respect... Patrick Henry once said "Bad men cannot make good citizens. It is when a people forget God that tyrants forge their chains. A vitiated state of morals, a corrupted public conscience, is incompatible with freedom. No free government, or the blessings of liberty, can be preserved to any people but by a firm adherence to justice, moderation, temperance, frugality, and virtue; and by a frequent recurrence to fundamental principles." If you believe in God, and agree with the pledge the way it's currently written, here's a petition you can sign. I'm sure there are others, but let your voice be heard.. write your congressperson, the president, the legislature, Congress, the President, the Mayor, the School Superintendent, whomever! Heaven help the people of the United States that the majority of us never forget God, lest we succumb to those who hate us and would make us their prisoners and hasten our demise. May the Lord bless us and inspire those that lead our nation to remain true to him, to guide us in righteousness and virtue. Until Next time... Icewedge

    1. Re:Nation Was and IS founded under God... by pauldy · · Score: 1

      Well put and underrated. I can only hope that there are more people out there like you that understand true freedom and are willing to stand up regardless of criticism for what is right.

  554. THEN DON'T READ IT! by OracleX103 · · Score: 1

    Sheesh.... if you don't want to read it....

    DON'T!

  555. Atheists for the pledge by steve_ellis · · Score: 1
    Depending on your definition of currency, that is not strictly correct. It was added to paper money in the 1950's, for no doubt essentially the same reasons as 'under god' was put into the Pledge of Allegiance.

    However, I hold in my greedy little fingers a collection of coins from the early 1900's that all contain 'In God We Trust'--apparently, it has been a part of US coinage since the ~1890's.

    I'm reluctant to call myself an atheist, and have recently become enamored of self-identifying as a 'heathen', but I think there are plenty of things that the court could better spend its time on than this.

    I'm not particularly fond of 'under god' or 'in god we trust', but as long as we deliver them as an opiate to the masses, we _won't_ have pinheads in the senate calling for constitutional amendments authorizing the pledge (yes, I'm talking to you Senator Lieberman).

    Also, despite their Biblical linkage, I'm rather fond of the 10 commandments--the last thing I want to see is a bunch of religious nuts coveting my wife (or stealing my stuff, or offing me). But seriously, for the most part the commandments are good rules to live by (at least numbers 4-10, the first 3 pretty much only have value to the believers in the 'Almighty').

  556. Re:Governmental trust by UncleRoger · · Score: 2

    ...printing a mention of God on some publicly distributed government items.

    Well, it's not just a mention of god, and it's not just some random government item. It's a declaration of trust in god and it's on our currency and coinage.

    This is, in effect, our government saying that a) there is a god, b) there is one god, and c) that said god is indeed trusted by the government (and, because of the "we" bit, by the american people.) Furthermore, this is on what is probably one of the most important (to the average Joe) and visible "items" produced by the government.

    I, personally, don't trust that god dude any further than I can throw him, and don't really want my government trusting him either. Except, that I don't believe he exists, and don't think my government should be forcing words in my mouth.

    So, this is a wonderful event, and I look forward to the next step of getting god out of our wallets.

    --
    Stupid people will be persecuted to the fullest extent allowed by law.
  557. Re:Christian beliefs? That's highly debateable. by Rakarra · · Score: 2
    Congress approved it in the 1950's, when everyone was finger-pointing at "known communists". Communism is an atheistic form of government, and so by affirming the "under god" part you are reaffirming your lack of atheism, thus Communism loses in the elementary schools.

    Actually communism more defines economic systems. Totalitarian regimes, neither necessary nor exclusive to communism, found religion to be bothersome since it was a competing center of power to a completely authoritarian government.

  558. bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The pledge sucks ass.

    Sean Penn sucks at directing.

  559. Interpretation is apparently the key then. by pauldy · · Score: 1

    Really, so were do you draw the line? The president is I believe Baptist I have heard him and many other members of our government use the term god on many occasions. Should they to be removed from government? How about the teachings of roman or Greek gods in school should that to be removed from the curriculum? Should we remove science and the teaching of evolotution because it goes against the Christian beliefs of creation?

    The whole term is generic enough anyway that it should not offend anyone who is not looking to be offended. If there is no god then our country is ruled by no one but us. If there is a god then he is the only one that rules above us.

    So what I feel really happens here is these "free thinkers" see that many people like to think of it as our nation being watched over by god and because of this they feel it should be removed in any and all forms. I feel like this is petty and childish the use of the constitution as a weapon to deny people their rights which is expressly outlined with the 9th amendment.

    1. Re:Interpretation is apparently the key then. by Rakarra · · Score: 2
      Really, so were do you draw the line? The president is I believe Baptist I have heard him and many other members of our government use the term god on many occasions. Should they to be removed from government?

      No, again, I mentioned I was fine with personal beliefs in God. When the President invokes God or thanks God, etc, I know that is a personal statement. But that is much different from sliding that into an official national pledge.

      How about the teachings of roman or Greek gods in school should that to be removed from the curriculum?

      Nope, because it has to do with history. I also believe that the history of Christianity should be taught in history classes as well from a historical perspective, due to its great importance in history.

      Should we remove science and the teaching of evolotution because it goes against the Christian beliefs of creation?

      No, because it's what science currently believes to be the best explanation of what occurs. Some teachers will absolutely set that in stone, but they shouldn't. That's bad science.

      The whole term is generic enough anyway that it should not offend anyone who is not looking to be offended.

      Personally, I think the whole has been blown way out of proportion on both sides. Sure it's unconstitional, but there are a huge number of unconstitional things the government does that are a hell of a lot more important.

  560. Re:Is Open Source the answer? by Xaoswolf · · Score: 2

    This doesn't really have anything to do with an "establishment of religion". By large this is, and has always been, a religious country. It also just says god, it doesn't specify any god or specific religion. You could take that to mean whatever you want.

  561. Re:Governmental trust by junkgrep · · Score: 2

    It's worse than that: it's our official motto. And the "We" is not the government: it's the people. Leading to the conclusion that either the motto is a lie (not eveyrone in the "We" trusts, much less believes in, God), or a backhanded implication that those who do not trust in God are not really legitimate members of the "We"

  562. One nation under invisible pink unicorns by I+am+Jack's+username · · Score: 1
    > I don't understand psychologically what makes it so important to compel others to swear allegiance to their particular God. It sounds rather...Taliban...to me. Or suggests a kind of self-doubt and paranoia allayed only by consensus, the assuredness of hearing many others pledge allegiance to a God you have some kind of doubt about. - quag7

    "Truth does not demand belief. Scientists do not join hands every Sunday, singing, "yes, gravity is real! I will have faith! I will be strong! I believe in my heart that what goes up, up, up must come down, down. down. Amen!" If they did, we would think they were pretty insecure about it." - Dan Barker